Oh, I should probably also mention that I have a small leak in the concrete. Another item to be addressed eventually.
In the long term your ch will rise as you will need to replace water lost to evaporation with calcium laden water. The calcium remains & doesn’t evaporate.Maybe I’m not stating the question well. I know what will happen with high TA and the recommended way to maintain a balanced CSI. Scaling won’t occur if CSI is in a good place, but a good CSI can occur even if TA is high (like how my water is now). My point is as I keep adding acid and my TA drops, I’ll eventually need to add CH to keep a good CSI up. If one doesn’t want to add CH, the alternative to keeping CSI up would be to keep TA up. The obvious down side is overall a lot more acid will be needed in this approach to maintain a good pH.
My leak is a separate issue to the CH dropping thing because it’s very small and I have not topped off my water level since the initial filling.
Play with temperature in the CSI calculation.. values will change a lot given how cold you currently report the water temperature.My current numbers:
pH: 7.6
TA: 110
CH: 230
CYA: 45
Avg temp: 55F
CSI: -0.26
My pH has been rising fairly quickly so I've been pushing it down with acid, which in turn is rapidly dropping TA. This is further pushing my CSI more negative. For example, if this continues and TA eventually gets to say 80, the CSI (all other levels the same) goes to -0.42. The only other levers to bring CSI up is increased water temperature and increased CH. At the pace I've been adding acid, the water temp isn't going to go up significantly by summer to match. That leaves CH as the sole lever. So either I increase CH as that happens, or ignore it and live with decently negative CSI until (hopefully) summer. Maybe being CSI negative for that short of a time is irrelevant. CSI before I refilled was massively negative for years.
45 counts as 50 for chlorination purposes.I have a full time water temp data logger. It fluctuates day/night between 50F-58F. My pool is mostly shaded. I'd guess at peak summer (July/Aug) it could add 10F, but that's just a guess.
How is 45 not a valid number for CYA? The Taylor tic marks are at 40 and 50, but the scale (slightly logarithmic) is easy enough to see where 45 is.
Ok good - sounds like you've got the idea and have things in control. You also have one very cold pool!I have a full time water temp data logger. It fluctuates day/night between 50F-58F. My pool is mostly shaded. I'd guess at peak summer (July/Aug) it could add 10F, but that's just a guess.
The ring looks like the Cadillac solution. Beautiful. I think most here use a clean rock. Important caveat: Make sure it's big enough that it can't possibly go down the suction pipe. There's an epic thread where that happened, followed by a heroic effort to get it un-jammed.My skimmer basket has been occasionally floating up letting leaves through to collect at the pump pre-filter. I couldn't figure out what people normally do to address that, so I just bought this 316 stainless ring to put at the bottom of basket:
Just put a rock in the skimmer basket. Make sure it's larger than the suction pipe at the bottom of the skimmer.My skimmer basket has been occasionally floating up letting leaves through to collect at the pump pre-filter. I couldn't figure out what people normally do to address that