chem geek said:
As the temperature of water drops, the pH naturally rises due to the chemical equilibriums involved and this tends to keep the saturation index fairly constant (only dropping a little). So you normally should not fight this and should let the pH rise as the water gets colder.
Pragmatically, that's my takeaway from this discussion.
JasonLion said:
By and large, tracking your CSI isn't especially important. If you stick to chemical levels within the recommended ranges, there is no need to think about what your CSI is.
You don't mean it! :-D If it's not very important then I wouldn't bother to measure it. I seem to recall that some smart person :idea: somewhere authored an application in Java script and HTML that provides a mechanism for tracking CSI. Moreover, it was precisely this:
sticking to chemical levels within the recommended ranges, that brought me to the question at hand. Note this rather didactic passage:
Adjust your pH to 7.5-7.6 and not any lower. Monitor your pH and when it climbs to 7.8 add acid to lower it back to 7.5-7.6 (This is also IMPORTANT!)
From the article,
Water Balance for SWGs, its content hardly conflicts with other sage advice dispensed in Pool School, and elsewhere. It's no good to say that these levels are only "suggested", the advice to maintain pH within the recommended range seems to fall somewhere between a prescription and a commandment. What I have learned from this is that the SI is a rather important tool that can be used to predict or validate the usefulness of the so-called recommended ranges. Is this the wrong lesson? I won't be dumping any more acid in the pool trying to fight off a measured pH of 8.0 because I now have an improved understanding of the relationship between temperature and pH level and a useful tool called the Pool Calculator that provides corroborative information in the form of a calculated CSI. To have stuck with NSPI/APSP's dogmatic 7.4-7.6 seems to me, in the light of this discussion, to have been the more foolhardy choice. If I may dare recommend some modification to Pool School material, it would be to include at least a paragraph in articles and a starred footnote in tables that explains or notes the temperature/pH relationship so that readers can benefit from information that took me three years to come by.
ABCs of Pool Water Chemistry
Water Balance for SWGs
Recommended Levels
The Pool Calculator
chem geek said:
You have to almost triple TDS from 500 to 1400 to have the saturation index drop by 0.1 units though doubling from 1500 to 3000 results in another 0.1 drop but that would bring you to saltwater chlorine generator (SWG) pool levels.
Oh, how I wish I'd never heard of TDS! It may be my undoing, but at this point I'm unwilling to turn back from the journey already begun. It matters. It doesn't matter. It sometime matters. Wide disagreement over how to report its constituents, differing views as to the seriousness of its effects on potable water, swimming pools, waterways, wildlife and health. TDS, like phosphates and sulfates, may rightfully be relegated to Advanced Topics, well outside the purvue of the average pool owner but it's not purely academic, unless the entire notion of measuring calcium carbonate saturation is bogus. And I don't think anyone here is suggesting that it is. Perhaps one day I can (short of sending a sample off for gravimetric testing - that would be too easy!) compile a definitive report listing every known element in my pool water. Then I'll have to figure out what to do with it.

But that's an issue for another day. Thanks for your contribution to my understanding, as always.
Greg