Hi all!
We live in southwest Ohio with four young kids (7,6,4,2). We have an above ground 24' pool 48" in depth. By my calculations that's around 13,000 gallons of water. Our temperatures during the summer are usually the low to mid 80's in June and flirt with the 90's in July. That is, until this year. We're camping low to high 90's all week and it'll repeat next week.
Last year we erected the above ground pool and it's new liner. I noticed that, throughout the summer, I was adding what I felt was a LOT of chlorine. 2-3 gallons every 1-2 days during the hottest parts of the summer. With every addition of chlorine I was (for the first 3/4 of the summer) adding in sodium Bisulfate (made by Clorox) because, without it, the PH liked to hover 7.8 - 8.0. Total Alkalinity on this pool (and every other smaller vinyl pool we've had) is high - 180+. On and on the cycle went. Tons of chlorine, tons of sodium Bisulfate, repeat. Additionally, I had conditiner in the pool all the way to the maximum amount of 100ppm (we're talking borderline 'I gotta drain some of the pool before this gets cloudy' kind of thing). ANYTHING to try and keep the chlorine from burning off so much.
At the VERY end of the summer I decided to rekindle my long lost tumultuous relationship with Muriatic Acid. I don't recall the results because it wasn't long before we shut the whole thing down for the fall/winter. Swim season lasts until about Labor Day. Until then, I had preferred the granualr sodium Bisulfate for the obvious reason of - MA is just no fun to play with. The goal was to lower the TA (something that, according to the pool store, 'happens naturally as the PH balances itself out.'). The pool store's comment wasn't entirely wrong. In years past, dealing with 2-3k gallon "Walmart Special" vinyl pools, the TA did seem to lower when PH consistently stayed normal. The issue, here, though is the PH goes out of balance every time I add chlorine.
At 12:00am on Thursday morning I added 2 gallons of chlorine to the pool. At 8am that same day it registered around 5ppm. I say "around' because I was in a rush and just a test strip vs my K2007 Taylor kit. A few hours later when my wife and kids hopped in she said it was "somewhere between 3-5ppm." By this morning, 0ppm. That's 2 gallons of chlorine gone in 32 hours. Yesterday (like the last 3 days) was pretty hot. 97, 92, 94 (Tuesday, Wednesdsay, Thursday). The pool sits in direct sunlight all day long. We do NOT cover it, ever, and the water temp is hovering around 87 degrees. 84 this morning but it's starting to cool off for the next couple days before spiking into the 90s again all week next week.
THE ENTIRE POINT of this post is to ask the following: Am I following the right trajectory with targeting the pool with a LOT more Muriatic Acid? The Taylor kit is suggesting that, to lower the TA by 100ppm (it was 180ppm this morning) a 10,000 gallon pool needs a gallon. We're at 13,000. Looks like I'm going to the pool store. While the sodium Bisulfate was effective in lowering PH it did nothing to the TA. Frankly, at the time (last year), I wasn't even caring about the TA. Now I'm beginning to read that the high TA/PH is likely a contributing factor to my chlorine issues.
This year my "crazy" idea (since liquid shock isn't a riot) was to rely on tablets. I have two 3" tablets in my floater and they're doing practically nothing. My HOPE was to go ENTIRELY to tablets for TFPC and just keep a VERY close eye on the CYA. I figured, considering the bag fulls of CYA I added last year that omitting this practice, and letting the CYA from the tablets be the CYA additive, that I'd gain both the lower maintenance of tablets plus the necessary CYA to help with burn off. I don't think that's working. The CYA is still very low (like 0) and the tablets aren't doing squat in terms of keeping the pool chlorinated. I just don't to get to that true TFPC point where PH is stable, chlorine is stable, but my CYA is at the upper end of its limits and I'm forced into using liquid shock when I'd rather TRY and maintain with the tablets.
I welcome and appreciate your advice. Be kind as this is my first post and only 2nd year managing a pool bigger than 2-3k gallons. Feel free to point out anything I'm doing incorrectly.
Thanks!
We live in southwest Ohio with four young kids (7,6,4,2). We have an above ground 24' pool 48" in depth. By my calculations that's around 13,000 gallons of water. Our temperatures during the summer are usually the low to mid 80's in June and flirt with the 90's in July. That is, until this year. We're camping low to high 90's all week and it'll repeat next week.
Last year we erected the above ground pool and it's new liner. I noticed that, throughout the summer, I was adding what I felt was a LOT of chlorine. 2-3 gallons every 1-2 days during the hottest parts of the summer. With every addition of chlorine I was (for the first 3/4 of the summer) adding in sodium Bisulfate (made by Clorox) because, without it, the PH liked to hover 7.8 - 8.0. Total Alkalinity on this pool (and every other smaller vinyl pool we've had) is high - 180+. On and on the cycle went. Tons of chlorine, tons of sodium Bisulfate, repeat. Additionally, I had conditiner in the pool all the way to the maximum amount of 100ppm (we're talking borderline 'I gotta drain some of the pool before this gets cloudy' kind of thing). ANYTHING to try and keep the chlorine from burning off so much.
At the VERY end of the summer I decided to rekindle my long lost tumultuous relationship with Muriatic Acid. I don't recall the results because it wasn't long before we shut the whole thing down for the fall/winter. Swim season lasts until about Labor Day. Until then, I had preferred the granualr sodium Bisulfate for the obvious reason of - MA is just no fun to play with. The goal was to lower the TA (something that, according to the pool store, 'happens naturally as the PH balances itself out.'). The pool store's comment wasn't entirely wrong. In years past, dealing with 2-3k gallon "Walmart Special" vinyl pools, the TA did seem to lower when PH consistently stayed normal. The issue, here, though is the PH goes out of balance every time I add chlorine.
At 12:00am on Thursday morning I added 2 gallons of chlorine to the pool. At 8am that same day it registered around 5ppm. I say "around' because I was in a rush and just a test strip vs my K2007 Taylor kit. A few hours later when my wife and kids hopped in she said it was "somewhere between 3-5ppm." By this morning, 0ppm. That's 2 gallons of chlorine gone in 32 hours. Yesterday (like the last 3 days) was pretty hot. 97, 92, 94 (Tuesday, Wednesdsay, Thursday). The pool sits in direct sunlight all day long. We do NOT cover it, ever, and the water temp is hovering around 87 degrees. 84 this morning but it's starting to cool off for the next couple days before spiking into the 90s again all week next week.
THE ENTIRE POINT of this post is to ask the following: Am I following the right trajectory with targeting the pool with a LOT more Muriatic Acid? The Taylor kit is suggesting that, to lower the TA by 100ppm (it was 180ppm this morning) a 10,000 gallon pool needs a gallon. We're at 13,000. Looks like I'm going to the pool store. While the sodium Bisulfate was effective in lowering PH it did nothing to the TA. Frankly, at the time (last year), I wasn't even caring about the TA. Now I'm beginning to read that the high TA/PH is likely a contributing factor to my chlorine issues.
This year my "crazy" idea (since liquid shock isn't a riot) was to rely on tablets. I have two 3" tablets in my floater and they're doing practically nothing. My HOPE was to go ENTIRELY to tablets for TFPC and just keep a VERY close eye on the CYA. I figured, considering the bag fulls of CYA I added last year that omitting this practice, and letting the CYA from the tablets be the CYA additive, that I'd gain both the lower maintenance of tablets plus the necessary CYA to help with burn off. I don't think that's working. The CYA is still very low (like 0) and the tablets aren't doing squat in terms of keeping the pool chlorinated. I just don't to get to that true TFPC point where PH is stable, chlorine is stable, but my CYA is at the upper end of its limits and I'm forced into using liquid shock when I'd rather TRY and maintain with the tablets.
I welcome and appreciate your advice. Be kind as this is my first post and only 2nd year managing a pool bigger than 2-3k gallons. Feel free to point out anything I'm doing incorrectly.
Thanks!
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