CH Increasing + White Spots on Plaster

The few white spots in your photos are NOT the same as what I wrote about in my article "White Spotting." Nor are they "calcium nodules." They are a minor plastering defect, which means they are not caused by unbalanced pool water, whether it be aggressive water or scale forming water. If there are only a few spots like that, then I won't worry much about them. Just unfortunate that they occurred and are there. And I doubt that those few spots would be the cause of the notable calcium increase.

You have grasped and understood the information provided to you very well.
 
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The few white spots in your photos are NOT the same as what I wrote about in my article "White Spotting." Nor are they "calcium nodules." They are a minor plastering defect, which means they are not caused by unbalanced pool water, whether it be aggressive water or scale forming water. If there are only a few spots like that, then I won't worry much about them. Just unfortunate that they occurred and are there. And I doubt that those few spots would be the cause of the notable calcium increase.

You have grasped and understood the information provided to you very well.

Thanks for the info! That does make me feel much better!

There are only a few little spots like that. I see 6-8 total, plus maybe some really tiny ones I can see from the pool deck that could be either a “spot” or just a larger chunk of white aggregate. Visually, they’re really not very noticeable, and if they’re a plastering defect, then I guess it’s possible they’ve been there all along and I just never noticed. I admit, I’m looking much more closely at the plaster job now that I probably ever have.

In addition to the small, very bright white spots, there are a couple others that are more mottled looking and do bug me visually because they are larger. The two in the photo are about 1” in diameter. The one toward the bottom of the pic is definitely a depression in the plaster, and the other one feels the same as the surrounding surface. Do these appear to be defects and/or normal color variations/mottling?

I am still completely at a loss to explain the high CH levels. I really don’t think my fill water is the culprit. Even before now, I had measured the CH of the fill water from time to time, and it was always soft. And in the past couple days, I’ve measured it at various times of the day and after varying water demand from the house, and it’s always CH 0.

The only thing I can possibly think of is that some limestone dust from the coping is falling into the pool and dissolving, but I’m not even totally sure whether any of the coping is limestone. The orangey rocks could be, but I don’t know for sure.

I will do a partial drain & refill. Is a CH target of 800 reasonable? That would be about 1/3 of the water being exchanged and assumes no softened water being added to the pool.
 

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I decided to do a little science experiment. I swept up some of the dust and grit from the stone coping and added a bit of muriatic acid. It bubbled. I’m not sure that my experiment is conclusive, but I take it to mean that it’s likely there is at least some limestone dust in the stuff that gathers near the pool.

So maybe it is the dust that’s contributing to my high CH? Does that seem like a reasonable possibility?
 
I think you are correct that your softened fill water is not likely contributing to the calcium increase. Any reduction of calcium for your pool is a good move to make. Reducing to 700 - 800 ppm would be good.
Your experiment result does strongly suggest that some "dust" from the coping stones would/is adding calcium to the pool water. Excellent idea. But consider that it would take about 15 lbs. of "dust" in a 9,000 gallon pool to increase the calcium level by 200 ppm.

IMO, the plaster finish looks very good overall. The spots are small and probably not that visible without a close observation. Pool owners often look much closer at their new plaster job than do others, as you mentioned.