Hardness for house water is measured as CaCO3, as it often contains as much or more total hardness from Magnesium as from Calcium. TF Test Kits does not have this.CH is Hardness. Doesn't matter if pool or house water...same test.
You can get all of it on TFTestkits.net.
It has 2.7X less reagents. You'll blow through it quickly. I listed it way above in my comparisons.. The K-2006 kit
I use my TF kit for my house water hardness. You can convert ppm to grains by dividing by 17.1Because the TF-Pro lacks some of what I need (eg. total hardness for house water), and because it also contains other things I already have (eg. pH, Alkalinity).
I couldn't tell when it stopped shifting.
I've been taught that there is no such thing as fool proof, because fools are ingenious.Color matching. Easily gets bleached out if TC level is high.
FAS-DPD is accurate and fool proof.
Hardness for house water is measured as CaCO3, as it often contains as much or more total hardness from Magnesium as from Calcium. TF Test Kits does not have this.
It’s actually for debugging a water softener issue in our house. Like proavia said, measuring CH alone might be close enough in regions where Mg is low, but I just don’t know enough to comfortably wing it. Would rather just run the test that leaves me no doubt, anything that captures CaCO3.Magnesium doesn't really cause the scaling issues in pools that calcium does, if that's your concern. Magnesium carbonate is way more water soluble than calcium carbonate.
Maybe the reagents from Amazon are slightly less fresh than going direct from the manufacturer, I'm not sure if that's even true. But I really don't care, as long as their expiration date is after Sept. 2024. If they come in earlier than that, I can always return, Amazon makes that super easy.
Done! Let's see how it shows up after this post.Fill out your signature with pool, all pool equipment (including manufacturers and model numbers) and test kit info.
Totally agreed, but due to a bad choice to place an initial order with Taylor, this has become one of those last resort scenarios.I only go to Amazon as an absolute last resort for reagents.
I’ve had no issue with Amazon reagents. So definitely ymmv.
Looks great!Done! Let's see how it shows up after this post.
Also snapped a quick pic for an avatar, although I really should get one with the cover off the pool, umbrellas up, and patio cleaned up a bit better.![]()
Is there a particular Amazon merchant you order from?
No - just whatever is in Prime and fulfilled by Amazon directly. If it were to arrive expired, which for me has never happened, Amazon would easily take it back.Is there a particular Amazon merchant you order from?
Thanks! House is 290 years old as of this year, but I think that flagstone patio was probably added during the 1775 or 1890's additions. The colored concrete patio, walls, gazebo and fireplace were added in the 1990's, and then the pool with a smaller separate patio in 2023.I dig that flagstone.![]()
Should've added, seller was Amazon.com (not marketplace), and brand was LaMotte. I'm not sure how this would compare to pool test kits from LaMotte, or other brands from Amazon.com, per @Saturn94 and @reggiehammond.Oh... hardness test and SpeedStir just arrived around 2pm. Reagents are all late 2025 or 2026 expiration.