Hi there,
I have been fighting chlorine lock since opening this spring. I thought I had it under control, but this week it has reared its ugly head again...
It started off shortly after opening... I could get total chlorine reading off the scale, but free chlorine was reading 1-2 ppm max. I tested cyanic acid both with a strip as well as titration, and both tests read 0 somehow (even though last year my pool remained balanced with little intervention - and my pool was pretty much full upon opening after all the snow melt). IT was drained down to below the skimmers before closing, so the fill up was due to snow melt.
I got some stabilizer to remedy my 0 reading on cyanic acid, and added 8 lbs to my 25,000 gal system. The following week, free chlorine and total chlorine were roughly equal, at around 3. Cyanic acid was reading around 40-50 with titration, still 0 with the strips.
Two weeks later, my cyanic acid tests at around 80-90 ppm (with no additional stabilizer added), still says "0" on the dip strip - thinking the strips are just totally inaccurate.
It seems like my cyanic acid reading should not have increased that much with 8 lbs of stabilizer added. And now I am back to chlorine lock - shocked the pool yesterday, total chlorine is reading 10 ppm or so this evening after an intense day of sun, free chlorine is reading near, if not, 0.
Total Alkalinity is testing within normal range, as is total hardness. pH is a little low, I need to get some pH up this week, it is reading 7.0. Two weeks ago it was 7.6 and I added a pint or two of acid to bring it down - I am not sure if the acid dropped it to a low reading or if something else is going on there.
Any ideas what I should do next here? This is only my second year with a pool... last year it was so easy, pH was perfect all year, and free chlorine was easy to keep at 1-3ppm with a shock every other week or so (and inline chlorinator to maintain in between). Speaking of the inline chlorinator, last year I kept the dial at around "3" to keep free chlorine/total chlorine in desired range. This year, I have it set at 6-8 and still low or no free chlorine almost all the time.
Pool is basically spotless - I have a robot that runs through the week most days. A little bit of tree junk here in the spring, but the skimmers get emptied every day, and I have a VS pump that runs 20 hours a day. Water looks extremely clear, no signs of algae or anything. I even changed the cartridge filters last week just in case it was because of filters collecting organic material during the spring start up. Swim load is pretty low - it doesn't get used much during the week, and gets a few hours with a few swimmers on the weekend. It just doesn't seem like I should be seeing this much chlorine demand and it points to a chemistry issue instead. I test the water several times a week, do maintenance nearly every if not every day. So it certainly isn't from neglect
.
Open to any suggestions or requests for additional info.
I have been fighting chlorine lock since opening this spring. I thought I had it under control, but this week it has reared its ugly head again...
It started off shortly after opening... I could get total chlorine reading off the scale, but free chlorine was reading 1-2 ppm max. I tested cyanic acid both with a strip as well as titration, and both tests read 0 somehow (even though last year my pool remained balanced with little intervention - and my pool was pretty much full upon opening after all the snow melt). IT was drained down to below the skimmers before closing, so the fill up was due to snow melt.
I got some stabilizer to remedy my 0 reading on cyanic acid, and added 8 lbs to my 25,000 gal system. The following week, free chlorine and total chlorine were roughly equal, at around 3. Cyanic acid was reading around 40-50 with titration, still 0 with the strips.
Two weeks later, my cyanic acid tests at around 80-90 ppm (with no additional stabilizer added), still says "0" on the dip strip - thinking the strips are just totally inaccurate.
It seems like my cyanic acid reading should not have increased that much with 8 lbs of stabilizer added. And now I am back to chlorine lock - shocked the pool yesterday, total chlorine is reading 10 ppm or so this evening after an intense day of sun, free chlorine is reading near, if not, 0.
Total Alkalinity is testing within normal range, as is total hardness. pH is a little low, I need to get some pH up this week, it is reading 7.0. Two weeks ago it was 7.6 and I added a pint or two of acid to bring it down - I am not sure if the acid dropped it to a low reading or if something else is going on there.
Any ideas what I should do next here? This is only my second year with a pool... last year it was so easy, pH was perfect all year, and free chlorine was easy to keep at 1-3ppm with a shock every other week or so (and inline chlorinator to maintain in between). Speaking of the inline chlorinator, last year I kept the dial at around "3" to keep free chlorine/total chlorine in desired range. This year, I have it set at 6-8 and still low or no free chlorine almost all the time.
Pool is basically spotless - I have a robot that runs through the week most days. A little bit of tree junk here in the spring, but the skimmers get emptied every day, and I have a VS pump that runs 20 hours a day. Water looks extremely clear, no signs of algae or anything. I even changed the cartridge filters last week just in case it was because of filters collecting organic material during the spring start up. Swim load is pretty low - it doesn't get used much during the week, and gets a few hours with a few swimmers on the weekend. It just doesn't seem like I should be seeing this much chlorine demand and it points to a chemistry issue instead. I test the water several times a week, do maintenance nearly every if not every day. So it certainly isn't from neglect
Open to any suggestions or requests for additional info.