Well that is complete nonsense. I definitely wont be using it then. ThanksOnly way you can reduce CH is by doing a water exchange. That stuff they gave you just keeps everything in suspension and you have to use it weekly.
Well that is complete nonsense. I definitely wont be using it then. ThanksOnly way you can reduce CH is by doing a water exchange. That stuff they gave you just keeps everything in suspension and you have to use it weekly.
Here are a few pics of my water from this morning. Will this little bit of fogginess clear up? Was it because TA was too high ?To save your results you hit the "new log" button and enter your readings.
I wouldn't do anything to the water just yet, let the PH rise first as your TA is a bit high (your TA is a bit high and your PH is to low). Once PH gets to 8 or so, then use acid to bring both down. Rinse and repeat until your TA is in the 70 to 80 range. Don't worry about the CH, FC or CYA reading just yet.
Nope, that's just normal cloudiness that will clear up as you filter and keep your FC where it should be. If you have a return at the deep end, I would point the eyeball in the return down to make sure that water is getting mixed up into the shallow water and pulled into your filter.
By the way, when you measure FC and CC, use a 10ml sample and one scoop of powder. Each drop is 0.5ppm. Will save you reagents.
Are you still SLAMming? CYA is low, but really low if you're running the SWG and looking to use that for chlorine at this point.
OK - are you using the SWG to generate chlorine yet, or just using liquid chlorine for the time being?
If the water is cloudy it might be worth SLAMming. Even if it's a fresh fill it shouldn't be cloudy like that, and it might indicate organics. Your call but if I were in your shoes I'd probably do it to be safe.
Also, your signature says 23' x 20' x 36', which means 36' deep - you might mean 3', or 36". (Yes, we use a dumb system here in the US.)
Yes.. your SWG cell will need to be replaced.. years down the road. I got more than 9 years out of my first Tcell15. I'm on my second. The longevity really depends on your usage. And you won't know your usage until you live with it for a while. Also, you will find once you get your pool chem dialed in the SWG will make you lazy since it creates CL at a nice slow constant rate. You will find yourself going.. "Awe, no reason to test this week/today since it was the same that last 10 times." A nice consistent log will allow you identify something out of the norm as soon as it happens.... just sayn'I would put it in as:
20' - 23' x 36' x 3' - 8'
That might help alleviate confusion.It's not as important as the overall volume, but it will help us OCD types.
With a SWG we recommend getting the CYA up to 60-70ppm. This will help the generator keep up with the sun and let you run it less to keep it working longer, as my understanding is that SWG cells will eventually die out and need to be replaced. I see you tested at 20ppm of CYA today - when was the last time you added? If over 48 hours that should be pretty accurate and you could add 40ppm. (Better to be under and re-test in 48 hours to check, than to be over! Being over can only be corrected by draining, being under can be corrected by adding more.)
I would put it in as:
20' - 23' x 36' x 3' - 8'
That might help alleviate confusion.It's not as important as the overall volume, but it will help us OCD types.
With a SWG we recommend getting the CYA up to 60-70ppm. This will help the generator keep up with the sun and let you run it less to keep it working longer, as my understanding is that SWG cells will eventually die out and need to be replaced. I see you tested at 20ppm of CYA today - when was the last time you added? If over 48 hours that should be pretty accurate and you could add 40ppm. (Better to be under and re-test in 48 hours to check, than to be over! Being over can only be corrected by draining, being under can be corrected by adding more.)
Also, CC can be 0 with organics. It just means that your FC and sun exposure is high enough to burn off any CCs you do have before they can register on the test. An overnight chlorine loss test is usually the best indication of organics, though even that can be off. But, if you're confident the cloudiness isn't organic, then I would just keep the water mixing and filtering and keep the FC where it is and get the CYA up to where it should be for a SWG pool.![]()
I've experience cloudy or more like hazy water whenever the pH gets too high. After a heavy rainy week, it got up to 8.0 like yours was. Once I balanced with Jasco muriatic acid from Lowes, it cleared right up.I am not confident of anything, just trying to give all the facts. The water was pretty nice and then they did the concrete pour and it got cloudy over a few days and now is clearing up after 2-3 really nasty backwashes and running the robot 3x. I will do an OCLT next week .
You need to track Temp on the App so the CSI will calculate it.
I've experience cloudy or more like hazy water whenever the pH gets too high. After a heavy rainy week, it got up to 8.0 like yours was. Once I balanced with Jasco muriatic acid from Lowes, it cleared right up.
Yes.. your SWG cell will need to be replaced.. years down the road. I got more than 9 years out of my first Tcell15. I'm on my second. The longevity really depends on your usage. And you won't know your usage until you live with it for a while. Also, you will find once you get your pool chem dialed in the SWG will make you lazy since it creates CL at a nice slow constant rate. You will find yourself going.. "Awe, no reason to test this week/today since it was the same that last 10 times." A nice consistent log will allow you identify something out of the norm as soon as it happens.... just sayn'
BTW: I was really hoping it was a 36 feet deep pool. Cause I was going to seek you out and bring my SCUBA classes to your pool and practice free ascents.