Re: What chlorine level to shock -- now that half my CYA is gone
You can see from my post showing the log of chlorine addition to get rid of the ammonia and other products after CYA got degraded by bacteria in my pool. There are several things to note though some of them may be due to my catching the problem early before the degradation was complete. First is that adding chlorine resulted in it mostly getting consumed so that the FC stayed close to 0, but that the CC did not just keep climbing up. If the water simply had ammonia, then adding chlorine would normally result in a rise in CC until nearly all the chlorine combined with ammonia to form monochloramine that registers in chlorine tests as CC. Second is that the rate of chlorine loss starts out high for a while, but then drops off but not to normal right away.
So when this bacterial degradation of CYA occurs there may be several factors that lead to the chlorine demand. There is ammonia which combines very quickly with chlorine to form monochloramine. This happens in about a second with no CYA in the water and less than a minute when CYA is present (i.e. active chlorine level lower). It is possible for the degradation pathway to be interrupted and for intermediate products to accumulate such as the partially degraded CYA chemicals biuret and allophanate. These partially degraded CYA chemicals get oxidized by chlorine, but take longer than getting rid of ammonia (I don't know exactly how long, but given my situation I suspect it's a few days to a week). Finally, the bacteria themselves especially those in biofilms also are slow to oxidize by chlorine.
Regardless of the details of what is going on, the basic approach to handling it is the same. You keep adding chlorine until you get a consistent FC reading that holds. Initially, you won't get any FC holding for very long, but eventually its rate of drop will lessen. At that point you can consider physically removing the source of some of the demand and as Ben has noted the filter is a good place to start since it may have a lot of bacteria in it. This is especially true if your water is now clear. You can tell if your water is basically OK and your filter is not by doing an overnight chlorine loss test with the filter OFF either by bypassing the filter or turning off circulation (depending on what you can do with your particular setup) during the overnight test. If the chlorine loss is only substantial when the filter is in the loop, then you know your problem is primarily in the filter.
15.5'x32' rectangle 16K gal IG concrete pool; 12.5% chlorinating liquid by hand; Jandy CL340 cartridge filter; Pentair Intelliflo VF pump; 8hrs; Taylor K-2006 and TFTestkits TF-100; utility water; summer: automatic; winter: automatic; ; PF:7.5
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