Okay, I've had this pool for a couple weeks now. The previous owner used Leslie's for advice, chlorinated with Trichlor in a feeder on the equipment pad and a floater in the spa. His advice was, "If you come home and anything looks off, shock it." I found TFP before going blindly into Leslie's (and I still haven't been in there.) Received my TF-100 on Monday 7/31. Until then, I just dumped in a 121 oz jug of 7.5% grocery store bleach every other day.
That first day I only tested CYA (30-40) and FC (near zero). I recall pH being high, too, but I had just gotten the PoolMath app and didn't log those numbers. I decided it would hurt nothing to throw in some more of the Trichlor pucks the PO had left behind, since it should improve all three of those values, and last, oh I don't know, a week?
Kept testing daily with the OTO test, then a few days ago the FC showed up 0. Oh snap, the Trichlor got used up. Added another jug of 7.5% bleach.
8/6 I did a new battery of tests.
FC: 4.5
CC: 0.5
pH: 7.6
TA: 120
CH: 175
CYA: 50
PO left some Leslie's Hardness Plus behind, so I broadcast 4 scoops around the surface to work on the CH. I left the TA alone for now.
8/7
FC: 0 (Snap!)
Added another jug of bleach.
30 minutes later...
FC: 6.5
pH: 8.0
CH: 225
Broadcast 3 more scoops CaCl2
8/8
FC: 0 (Snap!)
pH: 8.0
Okay, WTH, better to put another half jug of bleach and a couple more Trichlor pucks in while I figure this out.
Clearly, I'm losing FC too fast, and that calls for an overnight chlorine test, right? (I'll have to wait until pucks are used up.)
I've seen talk of OCLT showing FC loss, therefore it must be algae, and a SLAM is called for.
My question here is could the FC demand also be from other organics, such as the metric butt ton of pine needles and crape myrtle detritus I'm pulling out of my skimmer baskets every day? If I try to SLAM, am I never going to reach an OCLT loss of 0, because I still have so much tree litter?
Other items:
I need to get more economical about buying liquid chlorine, and Patriot Cleaning Supplies sells 12.5% in bulk not too far away, but how unwieldy are large containers for this? It's easy to dose out a jug or half a jug of store-bought bleach, but how do people do it with a 5-gal jug? Maybe pour into a plastic 1-gal lemonade pitcher? Mark it up like a graduated cylinder?
The water has been clear this whole time, but somewhere early in this process I found myself brushing green stuff out of the tile grout all the way around the pool, though it hasn't come back yet.
That was maybe around the time @Newdude cautioned me that where FC is concerned "minimum" should be translated as "Swampville."
Our house is on a water softener, so I'm going to guess the automatic filler is using softened water, thus the low CH. Seems pretty silly that you'd pay to soften water, then pay to harden it back up, but I guess it is what it is.
I haven't backwashed the DE filter since I've had it. The PO said the pressure reads 18 when it's clean, and he backwashes when it gets up to around 22 or 23. It's been sitting at 20 for a while now and I'm wondering if I should just go ahead and backwash it based on it having been at least a few weeks. (But then the bag of DE is behind a bunch of Crud in the garage we haven't unpacked yet, so I'm not really itching to do it.)
Thanks in advance for your advice.
That first day I only tested CYA (30-40) and FC (near zero). I recall pH being high, too, but I had just gotten the PoolMath app and didn't log those numbers. I decided it would hurt nothing to throw in some more of the Trichlor pucks the PO had left behind, since it should improve all three of those values, and last, oh I don't know, a week?
Kept testing daily with the OTO test, then a few days ago the FC showed up 0. Oh snap, the Trichlor got used up. Added another jug of 7.5% bleach.
8/6 I did a new battery of tests.
FC: 4.5
CC: 0.5
pH: 7.6
TA: 120
CH: 175
CYA: 50
PO left some Leslie's Hardness Plus behind, so I broadcast 4 scoops around the surface to work on the CH. I left the TA alone for now.
8/7
FC: 0 (Snap!)
Added another jug of bleach.
30 minutes later...
FC: 6.5
pH: 8.0
CH: 225
Broadcast 3 more scoops CaCl2
8/8
FC: 0 (Snap!)
pH: 8.0
Okay, WTH, better to put another half jug of bleach and a couple more Trichlor pucks in while I figure this out.
Clearly, I'm losing FC too fast, and that calls for an overnight chlorine test, right? (I'll have to wait until pucks are used up.)
I've seen talk of OCLT showing FC loss, therefore it must be algae, and a SLAM is called for.
My question here is could the FC demand also be from other organics, such as the metric butt ton of pine needles and crape myrtle detritus I'm pulling out of my skimmer baskets every day? If I try to SLAM, am I never going to reach an OCLT loss of 0, because I still have so much tree litter?
Other items:
I need to get more economical about buying liquid chlorine, and Patriot Cleaning Supplies sells 12.5% in bulk not too far away, but how unwieldy are large containers for this? It's easy to dose out a jug or half a jug of store-bought bleach, but how do people do it with a 5-gal jug? Maybe pour into a plastic 1-gal lemonade pitcher? Mark it up like a graduated cylinder?
The water has been clear this whole time, but somewhere early in this process I found myself brushing green stuff out of the tile grout all the way around the pool, though it hasn't come back yet.
Our house is on a water softener, so I'm going to guess the automatic filler is using softened water, thus the low CH. Seems pretty silly that you'd pay to soften water, then pay to harden it back up, but I guess it is what it is.
I haven't backwashed the DE filter since I've had it. The PO said the pressure reads 18 when it's clean, and he backwashes when it gets up to around 22 or 23. It's been sitting at 20 for a while now and I'm wondering if I should just go ahead and backwash it based on it having been at least a few weeks. (But then the bag of DE is behind a bunch of Crud in the garage we haven't unpacked yet, so I'm not really itching to do it.)
Thanks in advance for your advice.