You’re not shaking it are you?Testing pH
FC is 6.5
Immediate result.
I would say 7.6.
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Within 10 seconds it’s this.
I’d say well over 8.0.
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What’s my pH?
No - turned over once.You’re not shaking it are you?
No - turned over once.
My understanding has always been you’re NOT supposed to shake it. Just cap and invert. No?
- Add 5 drops of reagent
- Cap
- Shake to mix
- Hold up to white background
- Read pH color
- DONE!
Lol!I think I like the CYA test more than the pH. Unless the pH is really low or really high, it drives me nuts.I dislike meters as well. As with all tests, get your reading and dump it. If you let any of them sit they change.
No. Taylor says not to shake but I get a better mix and results with a quick shake.My understanding has always been you’re NOT supposed to shake it. Just cap and invert. No?
Based on pic #1 I'd say you are very close.So you’re thinking 7.6?
@ajw22 and @Texas Splash
Ya’ll are about as clear as mud. LOL!
One says take the first reading, which would be the first photo.
One says lightly shake, which would be more like the second photo.
Now this is solidly smart!I use a "Manual pH Test Color Determination Filter". (Slot cut on a white index card.) Until I got the cataract taken care of, the test was Really giving me fits, closing the bad eye and trying to see the color with my "good" eye.![]()
Good info!Fwiw, I'd call it 7.7. A little more orange than 7.8 and a little more red than 7.6. The Taylor instructions say interpolation is okay.
Here's a trick to tell when it's risen to 8.0 (because that's when to add MA)... For me the shades of red at the top are hardest to tell apart... First do the normal reading and then add one drop of acid demand. This creates a second color to use for cross-referencing. In my case if the second color matches 7.6, I know from experience that the first was right at 8.0.
Maybe you can try this as well. The acid demand bottle isn't useful for anything else afaics![]()
+1First do the normal reading and then add one drop of acid demand. This creates a second color to use for cross-referencing. In my case if the second color matches 7.6, I know from experience that the first was right at 8.0.
Yeah I should have been clearer. It will be different for every pool, so needs to be determined by experiments over time, and I'm sure it's also affected by TA. It assumes TA is steady.+1
However, for my pool, it has always been .2 lower. This method works well for me to really tell the difference. My 8.0 reading with R-0004 shows 7.8 when I add a drop of
R-0005. I can successfully do this up the scale with the K-2006C pH comparator.