Hi TFP,
My main goal is to prevent scaling as I have a BLACK granite raised negative edge pool (water overflows on two sides). Is a slightly negative CSI the only number to be concerned about? I have read that a low PH is important for scale prevention but when I keep my PH on the low end 7.2-7.3, my CSI is too negative and the pool calc shows it's corrosive. Here are my CSI #s:
PH 7.3
TA 30 (i know this is low)
CH 450
CYA 19 (wife wants to keep this low plus this helps with making the CSI higher)
TEMP 48 degrees
SALT: None
BORATES: None
CSI -0.93
With the above #s, I have almost zero scaling but am concerned about the corrosiveness on my pool/equipment.
Even if I raise the TA to the upper limit of 90, the CSI still shows -0.40. Should I raise my PH to get a better CSI # or does this increase the chances for scaling?
Thanks All,
AJB
My main goal is to prevent scaling as I have a BLACK granite raised negative edge pool (water overflows on two sides). Is a slightly negative CSI the only number to be concerned about? I have read that a low PH is important for scale prevention but when I keep my PH on the low end 7.2-7.3, my CSI is too negative and the pool calc shows it's corrosive. Here are my CSI #s:
PH 7.3
TA 30 (i know this is low)
CH 450
CYA 19 (wife wants to keep this low plus this helps with making the CSI higher)
TEMP 48 degrees
SALT: None
BORATES: None
CSI -0.93
With the above #s, I have almost zero scaling but am concerned about the corrosiveness on my pool/equipment.
Even if I raise the TA to the upper limit of 90, the CSI still shows -0.40. Should I raise my PH to get a better CSI # or does this increase the chances for scaling?
Thanks All,
AJB