- May 23, 2015
- 25,727
- Pool Size
- 16000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair Intellichlor IC-60
Just to clarify - the FC and CYA levels were not determined by “trial & error” they are an exact ratio. For non-SWG pools, the FC/CYA ratio is 7.5%. For SWG pools, the FC/CYA ratio is 5%. If you you look at TFPs recommended levels chart, you can do the math and see that the FC/CYA ratio is constant.
Why is it this way?
About 20 odd years ago, in the late 90’s, a commercial and residential pool operator by the name of Ben Powell noticed a trend in the pools he managed and care for. No matter what the absolute values of CYA or FC were, those pools that got recurring algae blooms and those pools that stayed clear always seemed to obey a ratio - when the FC/CYA ratio fell below a certain value, algae would almost always follow. Ben started an internet newsletter and listserv (before websites were all the rage) called Pool Solution Inc where he shared his many pool care tips with anyone that wanted help. This later morphed into The Pool Forum where he routinely posted under the screen name PoolDoc. There he posted Ben’s Best Guess Guide. It had some very wide ranges but it basically proved to work in any pool that used it. Ben then met up with Richard Falk (aka, chem geek or perhaps Richard emailed Ben, who knows...) and Richard set about to figure out the chemistry of cyanuric acid and chlorine. Richard then studied several scientific papers on the topic of CYA from the 1970’s (!!!) where he found the chemical data he needed to build a mathematical model of the chlorine-cyanurate equilibrium chemistry. Richard put the hard math and science behind Ben’s discovery by showing the a constant FC/CYA ratio yields a constant active chlorine level (hypochlorous acid which is the sanitizing and powerful oxidizing form of chlorine in water) and it is that active chlorine level which determines if water remains sanitary and algae-free. Richard calculated that a 7.5% ratio would yield the correct amount of active chlorine to keep swimmers safe and comfortable in a pool. So, while trial and error (Ben) revealed a possible solution, it was hard science and math (Richard) that figured out what the correct ratio is.
Just recently it has been announced that the CDC will release a new version of its Model Aquatic Health Code (MAHC) that will finally contain a recommendation that FC varies with CYA rather than being a static value. Richard has worked for over a decade trying to get the CDC’s MAHC committee to see this important truth and it is finally happening....and to think it only took 50 years for the government to recognize the science of CYA that’s been around since the 1970’s....
Why is it this way?
About 20 odd years ago, in the late 90’s, a commercial and residential pool operator by the name of Ben Powell noticed a trend in the pools he managed and care for. No matter what the absolute values of CYA or FC were, those pools that got recurring algae blooms and those pools that stayed clear always seemed to obey a ratio - when the FC/CYA ratio fell below a certain value, algae would almost always follow. Ben started an internet newsletter and listserv (before websites were all the rage) called Pool Solution Inc where he shared his many pool care tips with anyone that wanted help. This later morphed into The Pool Forum where he routinely posted under the screen name PoolDoc. There he posted Ben’s Best Guess Guide. It had some very wide ranges but it basically proved to work in any pool that used it. Ben then met up with Richard Falk (aka, chem geek or perhaps Richard emailed Ben, who knows...) and Richard set about to figure out the chemistry of cyanuric acid and chlorine. Richard then studied several scientific papers on the topic of CYA from the 1970’s (!!!) where he found the chemical data he needed to build a mathematical model of the chlorine-cyanurate equilibrium chemistry. Richard put the hard math and science behind Ben’s discovery by showing the a constant FC/CYA ratio yields a constant active chlorine level (hypochlorous acid which is the sanitizing and powerful oxidizing form of chlorine in water) and it is that active chlorine level which determines if water remains sanitary and algae-free. Richard calculated that a 7.5% ratio would yield the correct amount of active chlorine to keep swimmers safe and comfortable in a pool. So, while trial and error (Ben) revealed a possible solution, it was hard science and math (Richard) that figured out what the correct ratio is.
Just recently it has been announced that the CDC will release a new version of its Model Aquatic Health Code (MAHC) that will finally contain a recommendation that FC varies with CYA rather than being a static value. Richard has worked for over a decade trying to get the CDC’s MAHC committee to see this important truth and it is finally happening....and to think it only took 50 years for the government to recognize the science of CYA that’s been around since the 1970’s....