New Homeowner - CLEAN POOL [back to shocking.]

Re: New Homeowner - Green Pool [STILL shocking. :: sigh ::]

fc: 2
cc: 1
cya: 40

I'm out of bleach, going to have to go pick up some more before it gets too sunny. On my way to do that now.
 
Re: New Homeowner - Green Pool [STILL shocking. :: sigh ::]

are you saving all the bottles for a final picture of bleach mountain? ;)

Posted from my Droid with Tapatalk ... sorry if my response is short ;)
 
Re: New Homeowner - Green Pool [HOLY AMMONIA BATMAN!]

UnderWaterVanya said:
I see the ammonia levels are dropping. Is that as good a sign as it seems?
Yes. When you add chlorine it combines with ammonia to form monochloramine so actual ammonia (NH3/NH4+) will drop (though not what ammonia test kits measure) while Combined Chlorine (CC) will rise. The chlorine also oxidizes the CC mostly to nitrogen gas and some nitrate which is why the CC doesn't go up by the full amount of FC that you add. However, the ammonia test kit actually measures the sum of ammonia and monochloramine, but CC units (ppm-Cl2) are 5 times higher than ammonia (ppm-N) units.

So if you start off with high ammonia then if you add chlorine rather quickly then it mostly doesn't budge the ammonia number (because the ammonia kit measures both ammonia and monochloramine) but the CC number rises until it gets close to 5 times the ammonia number. At that point, more chlorine lowers both of them. In practice, it's not so clear-cut and the CC doesn't get that high so at some point both ammonia and CC start dropping. That's pretty much what we've seen in this thread with the following progression of numbers:

FC .... 1 ... 5 ..... 6 .. 2.5 . 3 . 11.5 . 10 . 14.5 . 15 . 11.5 . 12.5 . 12.5 . 10 . 8 .. 9 ... 8.5 . 7.5 . 8.5 ... 7 .. 8.5 . 11 . 7.5 . 10 . 3 . 10 . 11 . 10 . 11 . 8 . 3 . 10
NH3 .. ? .... ? ..... ? .... ? ... ? ..... ? ..... ? ..... ? ..... ? ..... ? ....... ? ...... ? ...... ? .. ? ... ? .... ? ...... ? ..... ? .... ? ..... ? .... ? .... ? ..... ? .. ? ... ? ... ? .... ? .... ? .. ? .. ? ... ?
CC .... 3 . 11.5 . 12 . 22 .. 7 ... 3.5 . 2.5 .. 2 ..... 2 ... 2.5 ..... 3 .... 1.5 . 1.5 . 1 . 1.5 . 1.5 . 1.5 . 1.5 . 1.5 . 2.5 . 1.5 . 2 .. 1.5 . 8 .. 2 . 1.5 . 0.5 . 3 . 3 . 8 . 1.5

FC .... 8 ... 11.5 . 14.5 . 14.5 . 11.1 . 12 . 16.5 . 11 . 12 . 14 .. 2 .. 8 .... 9 ... 11 .. 5 ... 2.5 . 3.5 . 2.5 ... 2.5 .... 1 ........ 2 ....... 4 ... 4.5 ... 2
NH3 .. ? ..... ? ....... ? ....... ? ...... ? ..... ? ..... ? ...... ? .... ? .... ? ... ? ... ? ... >8 . 4-8 . 5 .. 4-8 . 4-8 . 2-4 . 1-2 . .5-1 . .25-.5 . <.25 . .25 . .25
CC .... 4 .... 1 ....... 1.5 . 0.5 ..... 1 .... 1 .... 1 ...... 1 . 0.5 . 0.5 . 4 . 0.5 . 0.5 .. 2 ... 5 .... 2 ... 3.5 . 2.5 . 4.5 .... 5.5 ....... 2 ....... 3 ..... 2 .... 1

The varying readings between FC and CC are because of high CC bleeding through to the FC test so that if the FC test isn't done quickly enough, then it measures some of the CC. So in reality for most of the above, the CC was actually high and the FC low which is consistent with adding chlorine to ammonia to form monochloramine. When one has potentially high CC, then one should do the FC portion of the test quickly and not wait to see if the clear holds. Having the clear hold is only applicable for normal CC levels, not very high CC levels which are likely to bleed. An ammonia test kit is a secondary way to confirm since it measures ammonia and CC combined though the units are different where CC is divided by 5. So 8 ppm ammonia can mean 8 ppm ammonia and no CC or it can mean 4 ppm ammonia and 20 ppm CC or it can mean 0 ppm ammonia and 40 ppm CC. So if the FC/CC test is done correctly, then the CC shouldn't read any higher than 5 times the ammonia test reading and for the readings above that does appear to be the case.

The lessons that should be learned from this are 1) when cleaning a pool that has been "let go" where the chlorine went to zero for any time (even a couple of days) there might be bacterial conversion of CYA to ammonia, especially if the CYA is unexpectedly low and if adding lots of chlorine seems to go away very quickly within minutes, 2) when doing the FC/CC test if the clear doesn't hold for even a few seconds, then suspect high CC and confirm with an ammonia test kit (the salicylate type of test is best for this), 3) as shown from my own experience with this, there can be more chlorine demand than indicated from the ammonia and CC because CYA may be partially broken down (especially if one catches the conversion in the middle of the process as I did so the CYA was not yet to zero). Note that in my case, there was very high and very fast chlorine demand, but the CC did not rise that much. This may be because of the intermediate partially broken down CYA products. The real tell-tale sign is VERY rapid chlorine consumption, much more rapid than even losing half the FC in an hour as could occur from sunlight with no CYA. Chlorine oxidation of algae doesn't happen that quickly either.
 
Re: New Homeowner - Green Pool [STILL shocking. :: sigh ::]

UnderWaterVanya said:
Oops, left that out, sorry. It was a definite .25ppm at the last reading.

I really don't have the patience to test AGAIN right now, so I'm going to assume that my fc is 0 for the moment (2 hours after a 2fc reading with full sunlight and 80+ temps already) and shock up to my proper normal shock level - 15. I have some family coming over today and we would all like to get in the pool, so I want to make sure that I'm still keeping up on the process, but that we're not going to be uncomfortable either.

Thanks for the info ChemGeek. I'll read and reread it a few times over today to really let it sink in.
 
Re: New Homeowner - Green Pool [HOLY AMMONIA BATMAN!]

chem geek said:
UnderWaterVanya said:
I see the ammonia levels are dropping. Is that as good a sign as it seems?
Yes. When you add chlorine it combines with ammonia to form monochloramine so actual ammonia (NH3/NH4+) will drop (though not what ammonia test kits measure) while Combined Chlorine (CC) will rise. The chlorine also oxidizes the CC mostly to nitrogen gas and some nitrate which is why the CC doesn't go up by the full amount of FC that you add. However, the ammonia test kit actually measures the sum of ammonia and monochloramine, but CC units (ppm-Cl2) are 5 times higher than ammonia (ppm-N) units...

Thank you - again! This is a fantastic post (at least for me) and helps me understand things more clearly.
 
Re: New Homeowner - Green Pool [STILL shocking. :: sigh ::]

Made ChemGeeks chart a little easier to read. Great idea. Still not quite sure what's going on, but it sounds like I'm not QUITE doing the tests properly and letting cc bleed through to my fc, and that my ammonia test isn't measuring JUST ammonia, but - as long as I can keep dropping, I am happy.

Thanks everyone!

tt2Zk.jpg
 
Re: New Homeowner - Green Pool [STILL shocking. :: sigh ::]

One thing this clearly reinforces - even if you could package up and distribute bacteria eating CYA; it would not be a "good" fix for a high CYA. The bacteria leaves a worse problem behind than the original one!

Euck!
:hammer:
 

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Re: New Homeowner - Green Pool [STILL shocking. :: sigh ::]

BUT ... if we could come up with a bacteria that kills the bacteria that causes the CYA conversion and then converts the ammonia to rainbows ............
 
Re: New Homeowner - Green Pool [STILL shocking. :: sigh ::]

jblizzle said:
BUT ... if we could come up with a bacteria that kills the bacteria that causes the CYA conversion and then converts the ammonia to rainbows ............

I can see the ads now...

"...pink hearts, yellow moons, orange stars, and green clovers...

It's magically delicious!"

Oh wait... maybe that's another commercial! :whip:
 
Re: New Homeowner - Green Pool [STILL shocking. :: sigh ::]

:lol:

I just did another set of tests per ChemGeeks instructions. As soon as I went clear when testing cc i added the 5 drops of the next reagent and very quickly did the first drops again to test for cc.

Using that method, I came up with the following results for fc/cc.

fc: 4.5
cc: .5
nh3: .25

3 182oz jugs of 6% going in.
 
Re: New Homeowner - Green Pool [STILL shocking. :: sigh ::]

fc: 4.5
cc: 2
nh3: .25

Another 3 182oz jugs of 6% going in. Scratch that. I'm going to do 6 jugs, which should get me up to 27.5. Various things indicate that you have to get 10x the cc and/or 10x the nh3 to reach a breakpoint... I'm getting to the end of my rope here, so at the risk of a little liner bleaching (which honestly I don't think can get much worse than it already was when I bought the house) will hopefully bring me OVER the break point and finally get rid of that last lingering bit of ammonia.
 
Re: New Homeowner - Green Pool [STILL shocking. :: sigh ::]

RockstarNE said:
fc: 4.5
cc: 2
nh3: .25

Another 3 182oz jugs of 6% going in. Scratch that. I'm going to do 6 jugs, which should get me up to 27.5. Various things indicate that you have to get 10x the cc and/or 10x the nh3 to reach a breakpoint... I'm getting to the end of my rope here, so at the risk of a little liner bleaching (which honestly I don't think can get much worse than it already was when I bought the house) will hopefully bring me OVER the break point and finally get rid of that last lingering bit of ammonia.


RockstarNE said:
I have some family coming over today and we would all like to get in the pool, so I want to make sure that I'm still keeping up on the process, but that we're not going to be uncomfortable either.

Thanks for the info ChemGeek. I'll read and reread it a few times over today to really let it sink in.

Did this change or am I behind the times? If you have family coming I'd add more slowly to avoid overshooting your target.
 
Re: New Homeowner - Green Pool [STILL shocking. :: sigh ::]

Family is either not coming or coming later, so hopefully there will be time for the chlorine to dissipate some before it's time to swim. though swimming isn't looking too likely. it's 90 right now but the wind is blowing pretty fierce, going to make it rather chilly in an already 72ish degree pool.
 
Re: New Homeowner - CLEAN POOL [WOOOOHOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!]

WOOOOOOHOOOOOO!!!!!

fc: 13
cc: 0, yes, 0. Not even the SLIGHTEST tinge of pink after adding reagent #2.
nh3: 0ppm.

TAKE THAT ALGAE, AND AMMONIA! TFP/BBB METHOD:1, ANNOYING POOL DWELLERS:0!

Wow. Can't believe I'm here. We're gonna jump in for a while now, and I will begin maintaining properly starting right meow! Thank EVERYONE for all of your help!
 
Re: New Homeowner - CLEAN POOL [WOOOOHOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!]

:party: :whoot: :whoot: :party:

Congratulations!!! :cheers:

Certainly keep an eye on it ... kind of surprised everything changed that instantly.

After a few victory laps :paddle: , post a full set of tests ... or maybe wait until tomorrow. Seems likely you will need some more CYA since your level appeared to be dropping.
 

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