- May 3, 2014
- 58,391
- Pool Size
- 6000
- Surface
- Fiberglass
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair Intellichlor IC-40
Do an Overnight Chlorine Loss Test. If you have had 0FC, it is likely you have algae in the pool water.
Got it. I’ll read up on that and give it a shot and report back. Thank you againDo an Overnight Chlorine Loss Test. If you have had 0FC, it is likely you have algae in the pool water.
Correct. Looks like you passed the OCLT. So being a bit new to all of this, now yo just have to work on testing consistency and accuracy. For example, instead of doing your FC testing with the 25 ml sample size, do your FC testing as follows:I assume it would drop more?
10 ML water sample with ONE generous scoop of powder. Count drops until clear and divide result in half. Example: 10 drops equals an FC of 5.
This is really good info and advice! Thank you so much! I'll report back. Thank you again!Correct. Looks like you passed the OCLT. So being a bit new to all of this, now yo just have to work on testing consistency and accuracy. For example, instead of doing your FC testing with the 25 ml sample size, do your FC testing as follows:
For easy math, let's say your FC is 6.5 this morning. First thing I would do right now is increase it just a bit to about 9 ppm. Remember the FC/CYA Levels as your reference to avoid algae. After increasing the FC to 9 ppm, test it again near nighttime. It should not drop below 5 ppm. If it does let us know. But on a normal day with no large pool party, you should not lose more than 4 ppm of chlorine as long as the FC has adequate CYA protection from the sun. You appear to have plenty of CYA (no more tabs), so always keep your FC in that 7-9 range. Try to take your water samples for testing at the same location after the water has mixed for about 45 min to an hour. Once you get in a routine, you might take your sample and do the testing at the same time each day so you have a good 24 reference of changes.