To figure out how negative the TA is, you can do a base demand test.
Fill to 44 ml line and add 3 drops of R-0007 and 9 drops of R-0008.
If the color goes to red immediately, the TA is 0 or lower.
Add R-0006 dropwise and cap and mix until the color changes from red to green.
Multiply the number of drops of base demand by 3.6 to get negative TA.
pH = -log(0.00002 x TA). Use a positive TA number for this calculation.
For example, if it takes 10 drops and your pool is 10,000 gallons, then it would take 3.2 lb sodium carbonate to raise the TA to 0.
3.2 lbs in 10,000 gallons is 36 ppm TA, so each drop is 3.6 ppm and your TA is -36 and the pH is -log(0.00002 x 36) = 3.14.
If you use a 25 ml sample, each drop of base demand is 6.3 ppm.
Based on a 200 CYA, the TA would be estimated at -150 (80 - 230).
If you used a 25 ml sample and did a base demand, the predicted number of drops is 24 drops x 6.3 = -151 ppm TA and a pH of 2.52
If you use a 15.8 ml sample, each drop of base demand is 10 ppm TA.
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Note: Make sure the log is the base 10 logarithm and not the Natural Logarithm.
pH = -log
10(0.00002 x TA).
pH = -log(0.00002x + 0.0000316228)
pH = -log_10(0.00002(TA) + 0.0000316228)