- Jul 29, 2017
- 256
- Pool Size
- 37000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair Intellichlor IC-40
How long do the really last?
From the Taylor website:
REAGENT SHELF LIFE
All reagents have a shelf life, whether they are liquids, powders, crystals, tablets, or test-strip pads. If kept dry, powders and crystals are very stable; acids are also long lived. Date of manufacture is not the controlling factor when it comes to shelf life—storage conditions are more important. As with all perishables, reagents are sensitive to environmental influences and will last longer under controlled conditions.
To this end, we recommend:
I keep my test kits inside and out of sunlight. Over the years I have replaced the reagents many time before the bottles were empty just because. I have on occasion done tests with the new bottles and at the same time with the same water sample with the old bottles. The results are always the same. I recently did a DPD test with the stuff that came with my original kit which was purchased in 2005. I got the same results as I did with the newer reagents.
I have rarely gone more than 2 years before replacing the reagents. I am starting to wonder if even at that I am wasting my money.
From the Taylor website:
REAGENT SHELF LIFE
All reagents have a shelf life, whether they are liquids, powders, crystals, tablets, or test-strip pads. If kept dry, powders and crystals are very stable; acids are also long lived. Date of manufacture is not the controlling factor when it comes to shelf life—storage conditions are more important. As with all perishables, reagents are sensitive to environmental influences and will last longer under controlled conditions.
To this end, we recommend:
- Storing reagents at a consistent temperature in the range if 36°–85°F (2°–29°C); extreme temperature fluctuation, say from a refrigerator to a hot car trunk, causes reagents to deteriorate.
- Keeping them out of prolonged direct sunlight. (Note: their brown plastic bottles help protect very light-sensitive reagents.)
- Segregating reagents from containers of treatment chemicals.
- Replacing caps immediately and tightening them carefully so that exposure to air and humidity is limited.
- Avoiding switching bottle caps, placing bottle caps on soiled surfaces, repouring reagents into contaminated containers, or touching test strip pads.
I keep my test kits inside and out of sunlight. Over the years I have replaced the reagents many time before the bottles were empty just because. I have on occasion done tests with the new bottles and at the same time with the same water sample with the old bottles. The results are always the same. I recently did a DPD test with the stuff that came with my original kit which was purchased in 2005. I got the same results as I did with the newer reagents.
I have rarely gone more than 2 years before replacing the reagents. I am starting to wonder if even at that I am wasting my money.