- May 20, 2018
- 49
- Pool Size
- 31000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair Intellichlor IC-40
Hopefully my sig shows up. I need to go look up specifics of pump, filter, etc.
Using TF-100 test kit and salt test kit from Taylor recommended here (1766 maybe?). Pool builder has been maintaining (?) chemicals after construction was finished late last year while working out a few kinks in plumbing and getting final inspection done. Just transitioning into my care and so I'm getting up to speed on testing and maintaining chemistry myself.
Initial test results showed salt low at about 2400, FC very low at 0.5, CYA essentially zero, pH high at 8.2, and TA very high at 270. Guess the pool builder hasn't been too concerned with chemistry!
Haven't had an algae bloom (yet) but I did add significant bleach to get FC near SLAM levels. No CC initially and seems stable overnight, letting that drift back down slowly. Added CYA and got that up to 60.
Added HCl to drop pH which... had little effect. I'm guessing because of the very high TA level? I've been doing some reading on high pH of SWG pools, and the effect of aeration. I have two spills and the infinity edge that drops 4 ft, so aeration I have in spades. Those water features run 14 hours per day currently (pool builder settings). I can turn spills off independently, but it's tough to turn off the infinity edge. I can, but it is a manual process, and when it is circulating only the main pool the catch pool is stagnant. Also, it's a little tough to maintain water levels as I think there is only an autofill on the catch pool, so if I circulate just the upper and get evaporation from both, then switch back to infinity flowing over, there is a risk of pulling air into the pump. Done that a few times, had to add water manually at that point. So, it's been easier to just let it always flow over.
All that brings me to my question - with a SWG and significant aeration from the water features, what is going to be my best method(s) to keep pH and TA in check? I've read about adding borax as a buffer and that sounds like it may be reasonable to do. Any other suggestions?
I'm in the process of adding salt to get that level up, and have been adding muriatic acid a gallon at a time watching pH barely budge measured half a day later.
Using TF-100 test kit and salt test kit from Taylor recommended here (1766 maybe?). Pool builder has been maintaining (?) chemicals after construction was finished late last year while working out a few kinks in plumbing and getting final inspection done. Just transitioning into my care and so I'm getting up to speed on testing and maintaining chemistry myself.
Initial test results showed salt low at about 2400, FC very low at 0.5, CYA essentially zero, pH high at 8.2, and TA very high at 270. Guess the pool builder hasn't been too concerned with chemistry!
Haven't had an algae bloom (yet) but I did add significant bleach to get FC near SLAM levels. No CC initially and seems stable overnight, letting that drift back down slowly. Added CYA and got that up to 60.
Added HCl to drop pH which... had little effect. I'm guessing because of the very high TA level? I've been doing some reading on high pH of SWG pools, and the effect of aeration. I have two spills and the infinity edge that drops 4 ft, so aeration I have in spades. Those water features run 14 hours per day currently (pool builder settings). I can turn spills off independently, but it's tough to turn off the infinity edge. I can, but it is a manual process, and when it is circulating only the main pool the catch pool is stagnant. Also, it's a little tough to maintain water levels as I think there is only an autofill on the catch pool, so if I circulate just the upper and get evaporation from both, then switch back to infinity flowing over, there is a risk of pulling air into the pump. Done that a few times, had to add water manually at that point. So, it's been easier to just let it always flow over.
All that brings me to my question - with a SWG and significant aeration from the water features, what is going to be my best method(s) to keep pH and TA in check? I've read about adding borax as a buffer and that sounds like it may be reasonable to do. Any other suggestions?
I'm in the process of adding salt to get that level up, and have been adding muriatic acid a gallon at a time watching pH barely budge measured half a day later.