Saturn94
Bronze Supporter
- Mar 11, 2015
- 1,864
- Pool Size
- 20000
- Surface
- Vinyl
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Hayward Aqua Rite (T-15)
STARLOG Update 2017:
I've been remiss in reporting this summer, but here's a quick summary:
1. After fresh water change, I did not treat during winter in dome for phosphates due to floccing tendency in high concentrations and inability to use vac to waste in dome conditions.
2. pO4 level is now 25,000 ppb despite a full water change last year and a much "lighter" diet of sequestrant and keeping calcium in the 200 range, which using soft water, has meant adding. So any theories about age of water, swamp recovery, etc. are in fact ruled out now...this reading is from a year of sequestrant use on water that started out at 1,700 ppb po4.
3. My swg cell on annual inspection and cleaning showed no scaling. It is designed to she'd scale, and it does.
4. My swg output indicates it is fully capable of generating its rated 1.45 lbs of chlorine as in 24 hrs.
5. My heater is operating perfectly, though I still get the turquoise scale. Testing this year shows the ratio of scale component to be roughly 10 parts po4 to 3 parts copper to 2.5 parts iron.
6. I've hired a Raypak tech to come out mid-Sept to inspect and clean the cupronickel exchanger and plan to take pics. One part curiosity and one part possible preventative maintenance to ensure no operational failure during winter.
7. I have both alum floc and a gallon of commercial Seaklear lanathum chloride on hand. I've not decided about treatment plan yet before the dome goes up. I may not bother, as I may find that so-doing just removes my sequestrant.
8. It goes without saying for those few hardy souls who've followed this thread, but for posterity, despite the crazy po4 level as tested by Hanna hi range meter, I've never once had even an inkling of algae, or even cloudiness suggesting nascent algae forming. So I think we can safely put to bed any notion that po4 mgmt is required for any reason outside of a desired to run the lowest FC possible experimentally, and possibly that po4 mgmt is near futile for folks on well water who don't want stains.
Even if the exchanger is full of scale and its lifespan reduced, I'm not sure there's an alternative option in my case that would meet my objectives, short of periodic inspection and cleaning of heat exchanger.
Hey joyful, swamphubby has a nitrate kit for his salt water Aquarium. Maybe I'll see if he'll test it tomorrow. We're kinda compartmentalized around here. I don't touch his kit and he doesn't touch mine
And I might add that I have no algae and he's constantly at war with it![]()
PO4 < 150ppb all season
FC 3-4 ppm all season
SWG 40% all season
Pump run time ~ 6 hours for SWG active --> 2.4 hrs/day FC production or 2.2ppm FC loss
CYA ~ 90 ppm all season
Note 3: Most saltwater chlorine generator (SWG) pools appear to prevent algae at a minimum FC level of 4.5% of the CYA level as compared with the roughly 7.5% of the CYA level shown in the "Min FC" column for manually dosed pools.
Generally a phosphate concentration of 0.01 mg/l will support algae species. (Page 56)
All models illustrate the importance of phosphate in aquatic systems. For example, equation 4.16a illustrates that each atom of phosphorus (as phosphate) added to an aquatic system can result in the fixation of about 106 atoms of carbon in organic matter. Further, when the organic matter produced from one atom of phosphorus decays, as per equation 4.16b, it has the potential to consume 138 molecules of oxygen (Drever, 1988). (Page 87)
Sadly, this topic almost always devolves into a discussion that misses the forest (globally lower chlorine levels) for the trees (specific arguments about algae). But, for the sake of completeness, let's deal with trees first.
In your opinion, is it worthwhile for everyone to test for phosphates?
can a pool owner floc with lanthanum chloride multiple times, until no (or little) precipitate is noticed?
That makes sense.
I believe I recall reading a few years back that bacteria does/can feed on organic phosphate, but that would be moot due to fast kill times of chlorine, right?
What's an "NSP"?