CreedenceTapes
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You need something that kills the nasties - and 99% of that is Chlorine. Everything else is pretty much Snake Oil.
I may have that printed on a t-shirt with a swimming pool graphic.
You need something that kills the nasties - and 99% of that is Chlorine. Everything else is pretty much Snake Oil.
I spend more of my life waiting for the Keureg style coffee both at home and the gas station.Me personally, I might spend 5-10 minutes a day 'actively' looking after the pool. It's less 'trouble' than my coffee machine frankly.
Lifting the cover a little near a return & pouring in liquid chlorine is recommended.
Love it. That link is for volume purchase, but I'll find the same or similar model for single purchase. Thanks!Apera PH60 : I've only had it a few months, so I can't speak to longevity, but it's accuracy, precision, and ease of use are great. Way better than one would expect for the price.
I think that's a good plan. Pitcher for this year, excepting the Frog when on vacation, then switch over to SWCG next winter. Thanks!@P00LNerd, I understand from a first-person perspective the need to over-complicate things, but it's really just as simple as this. I looked into stenner pumps and automated dispensers for a while before I got used to just using a pitcher and reserving my puck feeder for vacations.
Pitchers are dead simple, they offer very precise control, they're cheap, and they don't suddenly fail. Till you get your SWCG, just use a pitcher.
That link is for volume purchase
The wonders of Amazon. It opens to a single unit for me. Go figure. Anyway, I'd stick with that model. It's earned a good reputation in these parts.
'Minerals' sounds better than 'metals'.There was a claim made a few pages back that the "minerals" are silver and copper, and while I'm not sure that's true,
Depending on the unit, most deplete the mineral pack quickly, and it's likely harmless now if you dont put a new one in. (IIRC).If removing the Mineral Pac (sleeved around chlorine torpedo) doesn't totally screw up water flow thru the torpedo, I'd think this could be an excellent way of maintaining chlorine and CYA in an acceptable range, with minor manual LC tweaking.
My concern here is staining of stairs (white fiberlgass) and skimmer (white PVC), if I drop scale and stain control, as that Mineral Pac is supposed to last 6 months. I only installed it mid-April, and keep the sanitizer dialed down to its lowest flow rate, due to running solar cover. I think it's realistic to expect it's still putting out whatever it's designed to.Depending on the unit, most deplete the mineral pack quickly, and it's likely harmless now if you dont put a new one in. (IIRC).
Yep. Will be much easier with the K-1721 kit, presently on the way. I had been trying to measure CYA with test strips before, and either my eyes or those strips (likely both) don't work very well.Then monitor your CYA level so you know when it's too high to abandon that part also.
CorrectJust so I'm clear on what you guys are saying, excepting occasional pH correction, you folks run no chemicals, other than chlorine and CYA?
No scale and stain preventer? No Algae preventer?
Test strips are simply too vague for CYA. 0, 30 to 50, 100, 200, 300 (or whatevs yours report) doesn't tell us squat when we want it down to a 10. In the 30 to 50 range bought guess correctly, or correctly enough, but it's a guess at best. Then we add the inaccuracy to the mix and it's worse. Then the color changes as it sits and it up to you to nail it at 15 seconds or whatever they recommend. It's just bad news all around. Lol.I had been trying to measure CYA with test strips before, and either my eyes or those strips (likely both) don't work very well
Again IIRC, they deposit quickly and that level of copper/silver is supposed to last through X months of rain dilution and splash out. Then folks blindly add more, without testing or knowing their current levels and it's only a matter of time until staining happens. In wet climates it takes longer, but it's still gonna happen with enough time / cartridges used.that Mineral Pac is supposed to last 6 months
Not sure. I guess I could remove, dry, and weigh it. I don't have a pre-installed weight, but I could probably get that at the store. Might answer a few questions.Again IIRC, they deposit quickly and that level of copper/silver is supposed to last through X months of rain dilution and splash out. Then folks blindly add more, without testing or knowing their current levels and it's only a matter of time until staining happens. In wet climates it takes longer, but it's still gonna happen with enough time / cartridges used.
Most algecides are copper based, speeding up any staining. Again, with no testing before or after. Just arbitrarily keep adding more.If the staining is not coming from the metals in the mineral pac, it is more likely coming from the algea control
Having an appropriate CYA/FC levels, algae can't grow. TFP has no need for algae control.No one answered the questions on algea control and anti-staining. Are you really not running any of these products, ever?
The acid in your CYA packs lowers your PH. Again. Without testing the CYA before or after. Just keep adding more. And then constantly raise the Ph that the CYA lowered.but my pH seems to always trend low between testing and correction.
With 10m pools in the US, and even more outside that, there's an endless supply of folks looking for a silver bullet.Beyond that, adding cost to create a false problem almost never works in a capitalist environment, we have long lists of examples of such trickery being undone by competition selling better and cheaper methods.
I do not use algaecides.No one answered the questions on algea control and anti-staining. Are you really not running any of these products, ever?
they key is knowing exactly what you’re putting in your water (actual ingredients) & exactly how it will affect it.
Then only putting in what your pool needs when it needs it - based on your own accurate testing. If you do this you don’t need fixes.
That was not a "claim", it was citing publicly available information from King Technology itself.There was a claim made a few pages back that the "minerals" are silver and copper, and while I'm not sure that's true
To answer the question whether CYA is a necessary evil; I'm about to find out.I'm running a 15k gallon pool (Radiant Metric semi-inground) with solar cover and heat pump heater, with a Frog Leap system, and having one heck of a time with ever-increasing cyanuric acid levels. It's to the point where I just ran the Frog Leap without a chlorine "torpedo" most of last season, finding it easier to manually dose liquid chlorine. Unfortunately, it appears there's no chlorine pack for this sanitizer, which does not contain cyanuric acid.
We changed out about 25% of the water in the pool this spring, and have been holding the chlorine at a nice 0.5 - 2.0 ppm, which is ideal for the Frog mineral pac systems. However, our CYA levels have already crept up beyond 50 ppm, to where the dealer is now telling me I should be pushing the chlorine higher, to keep the proper free chlorine / CYA ratio. Of course, that's a slippery slope, as turning up the chlorinator also means increasing CYA input to the pool, on the Frog system.
I suspect "get rid of that Frog system" is going to be somewhere in the answers to this post, but my dealer seems to love them, and I do like the idea of running lower chlorine levels they promote. I just don't understand why they put so much CYA in these things, and don't offer a low-CYA or even CYA-free version of the torpedo packs, for those of us having this problem. It appears I'm not the only one.
Two questions to start:
1. I'm told the only way to lower CYA is by water exchange, but I also see products online that claim to reduce or remove CYA. Do they work? How?
2. Would removing the solar cover reduce CYA? I've seen conflicting info on this. I thought solar cover (blue) = reduced need for chlorine = reduced CYA input from sanitizer, since the CYA is in the chlorine tablets.
The only other complicating factor is that the sanitizer is downstream of our heater, which runs variably according to weather, and whether we have the solar cover installed overnight. When the heater runs a lot, the chlorine (with CYA) levels spike up, due to heated water dissolving the tablets much more quickly than unheated water. The Frog will over-chlorinate the pool in this scenario, even with it's control knob dialed down to zero, unless you remove the chlorine torpedo or bypass the Frog completely.
Thanks!
There's no 'seeing' about it. Without CYA the half life of FC can be as low as 20 mins depending on the Ph.I plan to keep the chlorine and ph balanced fine and see what happens with little to no CYA because the price is now prohibitive