Hard time measuring calcium hardness

Pierrot

Active member
Jan 18, 2024
38
San diego
Hi,

I'm using the Taylor test kit. I don't have any issue with measuring the various chemicals... except the calcium hardness. When adding the reagent, I don't have a clear cut between red and blue. The water slooooowly transitions from red, to purple, to light blue, to blue. So my calcium hardness is somewhere between 400ppm and 650ppm.

I read it could be caused by copper. I believe I have some (I'm not sure where it comes from, I only use liquid chlorine and muriatic acid. Probably a left over from the previous owner? Anyway..). I also read that adding some drops of the re-agent first would help. It didn't for me.

Here is what I did:
  • used 10ml water sample, then added:
  • 8 drops of the reagent (R-0012)
  • 10 drops of R-0010
  • 5 drops of R-0011
  • then added R-0012 drops again.
It started turning purple after 16 drops of R-0012 (including the ones added at step 1), and the last drop after which the color didn't change anymore was the 25th one.

When I get the water tested at Leslie's, they tell me my calcium hardness is 350ppm (I know the TFP community doesn't recommend pool store testing, but for other chemicals their measures are consistant with what I get, so I think they do it right).
 
CH testing in my pool water is also tricky - there's not a lot of color initially, so judging when it changes is also hard.
Wish I had some magic trick - I've tried a few things. The best I've come up with is more light, and a white background immediately behind speed stir vial.
 
Cut your pool water 1:1 with distilled water. Do the test with the mixed water. Double your results. It really helps with the 'fading endpoint'. Issue is iron in our Colorado River water.
 
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