Thanks waterbear for the detailed explanation. I understand now.
The powdered and puck forms of chlorine are more concentrated per WEIGHT so you have less to carry, but they are far more expensive per pound such that they are not all less expensive and as was pointed out some are quite a lot more expensive.
The main problem with the other forms of chlorine is what else they add to the water. The following are chemical rules of fact that are independent of product concentration or of pool size:
For every 10 ppm Free Chlorine (FC) added by Trichlor, it also increases Cyanuric Acid (CYA) by 6 ppm.
For every 10 ppm FC added by Dichlor, it also increases CYA by 9 ppm.
For every 10 ppm FC added by Cal-Hypo, it also increases Calcium Hardness (CH) by at least 7 ppm.
So if I have a vinyl liner and I add cal hypo I don't have to worry about the CH, right?
You can use cal-hypo for awhile but if you use it exclusively for a long time, then the calcium hardness level can build up and you can have cloudy water issues. That won't happen for awhile so if you want to use it some, you can.
You don't have to worry about CH being too low in a vinyl pool anyway. CH being too low is only important in plaster/gunnite pools to keep the water from leaching calcium out of the concrete. In a vinly pool, there is no calcium in the pool surface to protect.
If your CH gets too high, on the other hand, it can cause problems with milky water.
Janet
Edit: LIsa and I were apparently typing at the same time--she's quicker than me tonight!!
The people at the pool store are a real riot. I walked in and started looking at the liquid chlorine, the guy practically pulled me away from it and basically said I was a fool for
buying liquid chlorine vs. the cal-hypo because cal-hypo has double the amount of available chlorine than liquid. Of course the cal-hypo they sell is their brand at $7.99 a lb. and the liquid chlorine is $1.99 a gallon generic brand. Boy do they make their money on lies and uninformed consumers. Thanks again everyone for the education. It has been invaluable.![]()
You mean he didn't then warn you that LC adds to your "TDS" levels and that's a bad thing (Total Dissolved Solids)? That's a typical scare tactic as well.
Carl
It's not just pools: this sort of marketing is EVERYWHERE. Here's a great article on how DeBeers 'created' the engagement diamond, using a rather common stone:
http://www.wisebread.com/the-greates...vered-in-blood
At least, deceptive pool marketing doesn't usually kill people!
PoolDoc
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