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Thread: Min Recommended Calcium level is WHAT?

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    Default Min Recommended Calcium level is WHAT?

    Guys,
    Reading the PoolSolutions subscriber pages produces a minimum calcium level of 70ppm.
    http://www.poolsolutions.com/ptc/gui...c_chem_ps.html
    It also says to "Never add calcium if your level is 120 or above. "
    However reading this forum I see quotes of 200pm minimum.
    http://www.poolforum.com/pf2/showthr...hlight=calcium
    I also see quotes of 220ppm
    http://www.poolforum.com/pf2/showthr...hlight=calcium
    On my 9lb jar of Cal Up the label indicates 100ppm min.

    So my question is what is the minimum Calcium level for gunite?
    Thanks,
    Eric.

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    Default Re: Min Recommended Calcium level is WHAT?

    How did you get access to the subsriber pages? I've been trying for months now!
    Retired pool store and commercial pool maintenance guy.

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    CarlD is offline SuperMod Emeritus Vortex Adjuster CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars
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    Default Re: Min Recommended Calcium level is WHAT?

    Eric:
    What kind of pool do you have?

    If you have a concrete/gunite/plaster pool the calcium level should be between 200 and 400ppm.

    If you have a vinyl pool, without a heater or SWG, (like most above-grounds) calcium can be anything from 0 to 500ppm--you never need to add it.

    If you have a heater or SWG, you should follow the manufacturer's guidance to maintain your warranty.
    Carl

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    Default Re: Min Recommended Calcium level is WHAT?

    I saved the original subscription email from Ben for PoolSolutions. Must be about 5 years old. The userid and password still work. I was using the "Pool Chemistry, the Easy Way" link as a reference when I noticed the HUGE disparity between the 70ppm min recommended and the 200ppm on the forums. Anyone know why the PoolDoc said 70ppm????
    Eric.

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    Default Re: Min Recommended Calcium level is WHAT?

    I'd say keep at least 200 in a gunite pool. 400 would be the max.

    Michael

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    Exclamation Re: Min Recommended Calcium level is WHAT?

    While it probably doesn't hurt anything to have a calcium level of 200, or even 400, I suspect a preference for those levels originates with an excess of confidence in the Langlier index, and other saturation indexes.

    Please remember that those indexes were designed, not to protect plaster, but to avoid excessive deposition of scale on the interior of hot water and steam boilers!

    In my own experience, I've never seen plaster damage that was associated primarily with low calcium (less than 120 ppm). The plaster damage I've seen has been associated, in order of frequency and severity, with
    1. acid washing (#1 cause by a HUGE margin);
    2. low pH from use of chlorine gas or trichlor;
    3. low alkalinity, from use of excess aeration due to oxonators, water falls, slides, or other features;
    4. erosive damage from high velocity water flow from a jet directed at a plaster surface.
    It's probably worth noting that I've NEVER seen corrosive plaster damage on a pool that had principally been treated with either calcium hypochlorite or bleach. Even though cal hyp adds both calcium and alkalinity, in my experience, bleach treated pools have had no higher rate of corrosive plaster problems.

    There's some lab work and theoretical analysis, done a few years ago by John Wojitowizc, that suggests that calcium levels by themselves have little effect on plaster loss unless those levels are extremely low, in the absence of low pH or low alkalinity. This correlates well with my own field experience.

    So, if you want to put 200 ppm of calcium in your pool, and don't have a heater, that's OK. And levels of 400 ppm can be compensated for, though it's not a level I'd ever waste money creating.

    But, overall, given the tendency of people to use heaters, whether solar or otherwise, or fountains and falls, which create thin films which concentrate the calcium salts present, I think lower levels even on concrete pools will reduce maintenance and problems.

    There's no perfect answer here. There are too many possible variations, and too little real research. But please keep in mind, when recommending specific calcium levels, that there's a substantial 'cost' to calcium levels that are too high. This cost applies to ALL pools, but especially those with some sort of heating, or with thin water layer features (like falls or slides) or which are in low humidity climates.

    By contrast, any 'cost' to low calcium affects only a small portion of pools.

    Consequently, you can't err "on the safe side" by going high: that 'side' is not safe, either!

    Ben
    Last edited by PoolDoc; 08-01-2006 at 11:10 AM.

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