Hello,
I have two problems with regards to balancing my pool water & performing a regular chlorine shock routine. When I use chlorine shock, the pool water gets quite cloudy and I then have to floc it to clear it up (or deal with a very cloudy & unattractive pool for several days while the sand filter attempts to clean it). My calcium level is often found to be least 400 ppm (even the source water is 300-400ppm). I think it is the calcium precipitating out of solution which makes the water cloudy after shocking.
Here are my most recent numbers as tested by the pool store:
TC: 2.9
FC: 2.9
PH: 7.7
TA: 110
CH: 400
CYA: 110
I read it may also be the high CYA level I've got (110) that makes the pool cloudy after shocking with Chlorine.
Even if I drain & refill my pool to lower the CYA level, I will have the high calcium hardness level problem because my source tap water is very hard.
I have read that a solution to this problem (cloudy water after using Chlorine shock) is to use a chlorine-free shock. What do the experts here think about that? Any downsides to that, assuming I keep my Free Chlorine levels sufficiently high through my feeder tabs?
Here's what I'm thinking: If I want to avoid cloudy water after shocking, I need to avoid using liquid chlorine and use a chlorine-free shock instead. This means I need to keep my Chlorine levels high using my 3" tabs in the feeder.
This brings me back to the other dilemma. If I rely on my feeder tabs to maintain the chlorine level, this will eventually lead to an unacceptably high level of CYA.
How can I avoid a high CYA level? I could use liquid chlorine (without stabilizer) instead of the feeder tabs, but then I am certain that my calcium hardness problem will make the pool cloudy after putting in the liquid chlorine. I am feeling boxed in by this on two sides... Use liquid chlorine to avoid the high CYA problem but then that will result in a cloudy pool due to the high calcium hardness issue. Or I can rely on the chlorine feeder tabs (plus chlorine free shock) but then I will run into the high CYA problem.
In summary, I see two problems & only see a solution to 1 of them at a time, not a solution to both at the same time.
Problem1: High hardness resulting in a cloudy pool after chlorine shock. Proposed Solution: Avoid liquid chlorine, use chlorine-free shock and trichlor feeder tabs to maintain FC.
Problem2: Trichlor eeder tabs make CYA too high. Proposed Solution: Use liquid chlorine, but then I run into Problem 1 above, where my calcium hardness will result in a cloudy pool after pouring in liquid chlorine.
See the dilemma? Is there a way out? Thanks in advance for the help!
best regards,
Greg
I have two problems with regards to balancing my pool water & performing a regular chlorine shock routine. When I use chlorine shock, the pool water gets quite cloudy and I then have to floc it to clear it up (or deal with a very cloudy & unattractive pool for several days while the sand filter attempts to clean it). My calcium level is often found to be least 400 ppm (even the source water is 300-400ppm). I think it is the calcium precipitating out of solution which makes the water cloudy after shocking.
Here are my most recent numbers as tested by the pool store:
TC: 2.9
FC: 2.9
PH: 7.7
TA: 110
CH: 400
CYA: 110
I read it may also be the high CYA level I've got (110) that makes the pool cloudy after shocking with Chlorine.
Even if I drain & refill my pool to lower the CYA level, I will have the high calcium hardness level problem because my source tap water is very hard.
I have read that a solution to this problem (cloudy water after using Chlorine shock) is to use a chlorine-free shock. What do the experts here think about that? Any downsides to that, assuming I keep my Free Chlorine levels sufficiently high through my feeder tabs?
Here's what I'm thinking: If I want to avoid cloudy water after shocking, I need to avoid using liquid chlorine and use a chlorine-free shock instead. This means I need to keep my Chlorine levels high using my 3" tabs in the feeder.
This brings me back to the other dilemma. If I rely on my feeder tabs to maintain the chlorine level, this will eventually lead to an unacceptably high level of CYA.
How can I avoid a high CYA level? I could use liquid chlorine (without stabilizer) instead of the feeder tabs, but then I am certain that my calcium hardness problem will make the pool cloudy after putting in the liquid chlorine. I am feeling boxed in by this on two sides... Use liquid chlorine to avoid the high CYA problem but then that will result in a cloudy pool due to the high calcium hardness issue. Or I can rely on the chlorine feeder tabs (plus chlorine free shock) but then I will run into the high CYA problem.
In summary, I see two problems & only see a solution to 1 of them at a time, not a solution to both at the same time.
Problem1: High hardness resulting in a cloudy pool after chlorine shock. Proposed Solution: Avoid liquid chlorine, use chlorine-free shock and trichlor feeder tabs to maintain FC.
Problem2: Trichlor eeder tabs make CYA too high. Proposed Solution: Use liquid chlorine, but then I run into Problem 1 above, where my calcium hardness will result in a cloudy pool after pouring in liquid chlorine.
See the dilemma? Is there a way out? Thanks in advance for the help!
best regards,
Greg