- May 3, 2014
- 62,865
- Pool Size
- 6000
- Surface
- Fiberglass
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair Intellichlor IC-40
Add 20 ppm TA worth of baking soda. Run pool as normal and test the next day. If below 70 ppm, add another 20 ppm TA worth of baking soda.My question is do I need to increase the TA from 30 and to how high and then what's the best way to do so. Will adding baking soda to increase TA (which will also increase pH meaning I'll have to add acid which will lower TA which means I'll have to add baking soda lol) do I just repeat that process and eventually the TA will rise all the while keeping my pH level under control. Seems like nobody really knows the answer, so I think I'm just going to try that out.
Once your TA is at or near 70 ppm, monitor pH and TA. If pH reaches 8.2 or above, lower it to 7.8. If TA falls below 50 ppm, repeat above.
Things should stabilize. You will always need to add acid in varying amounts throughout the year, depending on how much fill water you add due to evaporation.