Yup.I hope this isn’t every year like this!
Well last year the April showers showed up in July IIRC. No two years are the same but a wet spring is moderately common then the summer is drier. Unless its not.
Why do you care about bringing down the TA?Thoughts on this morning’s test? I lowered the SWG to 6% and I added more muriatic acid to bring down the pH to bring down the TA.
I am going off of what I have been told on here and on the pool math app to have it in the 60-90 rangeWhy do you care about bringing down the TA?
There seems to be no reason in your pool to force down your TA.I am going off of what I have been told on here and on the pool math app to have it in the 60-90 range
There is no wrong way to skin this cat. For some with crazy high TA (like 200+) they need to force it or it will take all season if even then. Or for those with high TA fill water and lots of evaporation, they'll want to get ahead of it. But vinyl in the northeast is pretty much hands off for most of us so you dont have the pressing concerns to lower the TA. Walk or run to the finish line, its up to you.I would prefer to do a little bit more work now, but I’m not using the pool and get it good then just maintain.
So it sounds like it’s either do the work now and have a little less later or continuous work throughout the season. I would prefer to do a little bit more work now, but I’m not using the pool and get it good then just maintain.
PAS. You got it. and @ajw22 is right. I went through the same thing. I had to have my TA down, so I built an aeration rig, that now sits dormant as I've learned.One other factor to consider is that if you have high TA/PH fill water and rely on that fill water fairly often, there will be a tendency for the pool water PH & TA to rise anyway. This is why I don't bother with manual dosing anymore and went with an automatic acid dosing system.
I will do that when I get a moment after work one of these days coming up. Haven’t had to use my well water for fill yet. I’ve only been doing the opposite with all this rainPAS. You got it. and @ajw22 is right. I went through the same thing. I had to have my TA down, so I built an aeration rig, that now sits dormant as I've learned.
Create another pool in pool math called Fill Water. Test the pH, TA, CH of your fill water and save it as a record in Fill Water.
Post those results here (we can only see your default pool)
Might be a stupid question. But what does CH stand for when you said you test that once every two weeks or so. Is that calcium?So it has been two years since my original post. I thought adding a few comments might help speed up the lerarning curve or give some other new pool owners more confidence that they will figure out the testing procedure. If I did, anyone could.
It did initially take me a few weeks to get comfortable performing all the tests and some are more interpretive than others. Within a few months I had the testing procedures memorized as to how many drops of each agent and testing is pretty efficient. Now, on a normal basis I test pH and Chlorine every few days, TA once a week, CH, CYA & Salt every ten days/two weeks. If there is severe weather or a significant change to the water level I will test more frequently. Now, I think I understand my pool better, anticipate what it needs and when based on usage, temperature, weather and changes in water level.
I changed some of the testing equiptment which made a difference for me. First off, I threw the pH test block in the trash. The colors faded and my pH was way off, which caused me a lot of headache in trying to balance the pool and all along it was a shoddy test block. That story is here. I now use the Taylor pH Test Block, which is also more granular than the block that comes with the TF test kit (.2 v.s .3 if I remember correctly), helping me better interpret the pH level. You have to use R-0004 in the Taylor block and not R-0014 that comes with the TF kit. I also replaced both the test cylinders as the lines faded on them quite quickly. I bought glass beakers, a 25 ml for 10ml tests and a 50 ml for TA. It gives plenty of room to swirl the contents well. I don't use a Speed Stir, though you could find a dozen threads on TFP and the benefits/debates of using one. I opted not to go there.
The one test method I changed around was CYA. Rather than filling with pool water to the bottom of the label and agent to the top of the label, I just measure out equal parts of each and add them individually to the test bottle. For me that works better than using the label as a guide.
I will say it was pretty easy getting initially established but is a constant learning process. I have so much more to learn just about pool chemistry, not to mention all the other aspects of maintaining a pool, but TFP is a HUGE help!
You asked it so its valid. Not asking is stupid.Might be a stupid question