Re: Spring opening cloudy pool excessively high PH > 8.2
Hi there!
09 May 2012
Ok, we started aerating yesterday afternoon. We have a small fountain attachment that can connect to one of our return jets. We aimed the other two jets directly at the surface. You can see wavy ripples but it doesn't appear to reach the surface very well. The fountain is splashing air quite well. The filter is on a timer now because my husband is $$weary of it being run 24-7 since the middle of April.
We also did another superchlorination last night because our FC was 1.4 and our CC was 4.4. My calculations (if correct) showed I would need to bring my FC to at least 44ppm to break even?? So I went with 45. I didn't want to add too much dichlor as our CYA was brought to 52 already with that. I knew we could handle going up another 20 or 30 ppm but didn't want to chance having it higher than that. For that reason, in the evening, we added 30 ppm via our Bioguard Dichlor. I added the remaining 15ppm via 3 gallons of liquid bleach. My husband is frustrated because after all that, tonight our readings are pretty much the same or worse:
FC = 2.4
CC = 5.4
pH has now fallen below 7.0 even though we are aerating....
TA = 200 - the same as yesterday
I'm all out of CYA reagent so I can't test that anymore. We also are out of the R871 as of tonight.
I forgot you told us to stop using the K-2006 for now. That could be one of our problems. We'll test again with the OTO kit and get back to you on that reading. I also am keeping in mind to be patient waiting for the alkalinity to drop.
He just tested with two different OTO kits while I am typing. The Pentair 4-way shows TC = 3.0 ppm (a very dark yellow) and the HTH 6-way shows TC = 1.0 or 1.5 (a pale yellow) ????? We'll head out and buy a new kit. I can't stand not knowing the correct reading between three different kits. Is it 7.8, 3.0 or 1.5????
Also, we still have chlorine silk sticks in our inline feeder. Under the method you teach, we wouldn't need to use that anymore, correct? Should it be turned off now? It still has a few left in there and the dial has been set at about 2 1/2 all this time.
I don't know what to do about our CC level. Twice we have followed the instructions for breakpoint chlorination and neither time did it reduce the CC but rather increased it. I understand that if you do less than the breakpoint, it will increase. But either our test kit has been faulty from the start, or their breakpoint instructions of 10 times the CC is faulty. This is actually getting to be expensive. I think that's why he's frustrated. We only have 3 gallons of the liquid bleach left and Pete is putting that in right now. If we had more, we'd add it. He's getting another 7 gallons after his softball game tonight and will put it in when he gets home. I know you said dichlor first, then bleach, but I am holding off on adding anymore dichlor until hearing from you. I want to make sure it's not going to end up pushing our CYA into the toxic range of >= 100ppm with the excessive amounts we've added up until now.
On the bright side, (because there always is one if you're willing to notice it...),
our water is probably more crystal clear than any water in the history of the world. (Once we got all the worms from the rain out....) It's quite pretty. Our kids are dying to swim in it because they don't believe it's not safe to, it sure looks safe to them and very inviting! heh heh. I'm comfortable with this method we're learning and I'm confident it will be the better way to take care of our pool from this year forward. I'm just still trying to "sell" the ideas to my husband because he's not as patient and the disagreeing test kits are making him skeptical. We've always been able to swim by now just using the chemicals we always have and the pool was pretty then too. I have to keep reminding him that "convenience" had a high cost to it AND had we had the proper breakpoint chlorination done upon opening our pool this year, which it obviously wasn't, it might not have taken this long.
He has one good question though: you said above,
The second case (ammonia, etc.) shows up in spring time as
1. CYA = 0, or else much reduced from fall level
2. Free chlorine levels rapidly disappear, leaving high combined chlorine levels, when then also disappears.
It appears this is what has happened to you. Unfortunately, the amount of chlorine required to 'burn out' the ammonia is discouragingly high. Unfortunately, there's no short cut -- you just have to keep adding chlorine till the ammonia is gone.
well, if our CYA was 30 for at least 2 weeks and just over 50 for a week now....why is our chlorine still disappearing so fast? I will, of course, re-read him the second part of your quote above and remind him there is no short cut. 
Looking forward to hearing from you. Thank you so much!
Last edited by PoolDoc; 05-11-2012 at 07:22 PM.
32x16 IG 18K vinyl Grecian; all Hayward equipment: S244T sand filter; .75HP Super Pump; Booster Pump 5060 & Viper; H250IDL2 Heater; CL200 feeder; PF:6.5
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