Retiring from Bioguard - what's my shopping list?

Avborges

Active member
Aug 9, 2023
27
Connecticut
Pool Size
15000
Surface
Vinyl
Chlorine
Salt Water Generator
SWG Type
Hayward Aqua Rite (T-9)
Hello TFP, I'm new here but really excited to take over our pool maintenance. We have been testing our water in the lab and leaving each time with $200-$300 work of chemicals. It seems I can do this on my own with the right tools. I have ordered the Taylor K-1766 to test the salt. I'm still researching a test kit for the other elements. I still have 5 bags of mineral renewal to go through. Once that's gone, I would like to manage the pool chemistry on my own. What's everything (chemicals) I should always have in stock in the shed for bi-weekly water testing? When I open my pool, is bioguard beginnings a necessity or can I just buy norton salt? Thank you!
 
Hello TFP, I'm new here but really excited to take over our pool maintenance. We have been testing our water in the lab and leaving each time with $200-$300 work of chemicals. It seems I can do this on my own with the right tools. I have ordered the Taylor K-1766 to test the salt. I'm still researching a test kit for the other elements. I still have 5 bags of mineral renewal to go through. Once that's gone, I would like to manage the pool chemistry on my own. What's everything (chemicals) I should always have in stock in the shed for bi-weekly water testing? When I open my pool, is bioguard beginnings a necessity or can I just buy norton salt? Thank you!
The only two test kits TFP will give advice on are the TF-100 and the Taylor K2006C. The TF-100 is a better deal as it has more reagents you need and less of what you don’t need.

How do you plan to chlorinate your pool once you’re on your own. Unless you have a salt water chlorinator, all you need to have is liquid chlorine and likely some muriatic acid.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Avborges
The only two test kits TFP will give advice on are the TF-100 and the Taylor K2006C. The TF-100 is a better deal as it has more reagents you need and less of what you don’t need.

How do you plan to chlorinate your pool once you’re on your own. Unless you have a salt water chlorinator, all you need to have is liquid chlorine and likely some muriatic acid.
We have a T9 Cell to generate chlorine. Is that what you are asking (i'm sorry if that's not the right answer)
 

What are the Mineral Springs Chemicals?​

The Mineral Springs products contain a mixture of salt, acids, and CYA. In addition to being quite expensive, they don't allow you to adjust each of those levels separately.

What is in Beginnings?​

Beginnings is a mixture of pool salt, borax, and CYA.

What is in Renewal?​

Renewal is a mixture of dry acid(sodium bisulfate), boric acid, and phosphonic acid (scale inhibitor).

What Are Alternatives to Mineral Springs Chemicals?​

Pool salt or water softener salt can be used with the Mineral Springs SWG.

Stabilizer/CYA can be added as needed.

pH is best controlled using muriatic acid.

Borates in pool can added separately with boric acid.

Scale inhibitors are not needed unless you have a high calcium hardness problem or metals in the water.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Avborges
@Newdude … weren’t you on the Mineral Springs turnip truck?

Honestly, you should get rid of all those bioguard products and stop using them. As Allen posted above, the Renewal and Beginnings products are just overpriced dry acid and borates. They also contain sulfate based flocculants. So your pool water is now full of sulfates which are damaging to the catalytic coatings on SWGs. There’s no easy way to test sulfate concentrations so you way want to partially drain your pool to get rid of some of it. The sulfates will eventually damage the cell and shorten its useful life.

Get a K-2006C or a TF-100 Pro with a SpeedStir/SmartStir and then post up test results. My guess is your water is going to take some work to get all the chemicals in their proper ranges.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Bperry and Newdude
@Newdude … weren’t you on the Mineral Springs turnip truck?
I WAS. It cost $600 to $800 to open with horrifically overpriced salt (beginnings). Then the renewal bags were 2 a week @$17 each. :roll:

Since then I buy 6 to 10 $8 bags of salt to open and generic CYA. ($50). I only need occasional top offs mid season of both and PH / TA stay rock solid here.

The TFpro salt from TFTestkits.net keeps me out of the pool store at $75 to $150 *per trip*.

The results speak for themselves

ezgif-5-80422c1b42.gif
 
  • Like
Reactions: JoyfulNoise

 
Frig. Manners. 🤦‍♂️

Welcome to TFP AvBborges !!!! When I say we got you, not only do we got you, but we were in your *exact* shoes once.

Everytime I went to the poolstore they had a balancepacksomethingorother to sell me @ $34, and with a large pool I needed 3 tubs each time. Or small $66 tubs of calcium for my vinyl pool that didn't need it. Or the copper based Banish algecide just to ask me down the road why my copper levels were high.

Folks before us showed us the way and we'd be thrilled to pay it forward :)
 
The HI38000 is a chemical test kit that determines the sulfate concentration in two ranges: 20 to 30 mg/L and 30 to 100 mg/L.

The HI38000 is supplied with all of the necessary reagents and equipment to perform the analysis.

The test kit contains enough reagents to perform approximately 100 tests.

Readings from 20 to 30 mg/L are determined to 5 mg/L resolution.

Readings from 30 to 100 mg/L are determined to 10 mg/L resolution.

Sulfate is widely present within natural waters in different concentrations.

Sulfate concentration is to be kept within a strict range for drinking water, especially since this value can be high near mine drainage points.

Sulfate is also rigorously tested in the production of beverages such as beer, due to its significant effect upon odor and taste.


Test Factor: Sulfate

Test System: Octa-Slide 2 Comparator

Range/Sensitivity: 20, 40, 60, 80, 100, 120, 160, 200 ppm SO42-

# of Tests: 50

# of Reagents: 1

Ship Code: (R1) Small Quantity Hazardous Material - No Fees Applicable

Ship Weight in lbs.: 1

 
Yes, the barium chloride method is well known for testing for sulfate but the problem is that they use a visual comparator method which is about as frustrating to use as the CYA test. It’s also not accurate over large ranges so you have to know approximately what your sample concentration is before testing. In the case of the Hanna reagents, levels over 100ppm require a different set of reagents.

Both the LaMotte test and the Hanna test are very expensive for a one-off measurement … it’s cheaper and easier to just do a partial drain or an exchange drain and get fresh water into the pool.
 
  • Like
Reactions: JamesW and proavia

Enjoying this content?

Support TFP with a donation.

Give Support
Looks like a pretty low accuracy test, so probably not very worthwhile.


View attachment 521466

The correct method for using barium chloride to test for sulfates is to react the sample and form the insoluble barium sulfate precipitate (barium sulfate enemas are used as a contrast medium in colorectal imaging because of the high Z number of barium as well as the fact that it can’t be absorbed … otherwise most salts of barium are highly toxic). Once the precipitate is formed, one then decants and dries out the precipitate so that the actual weight of barium sulfate can be measured which is the used to calculate the mg/L (ppm) of sulfate.

But that’s not a test one can do at the poolside. It’s a lab based method.
 
The correct method for using barium chloride to test for sulfates is to react the sample and form the insoluble barium sulfate precipitate (barium sulfate enemas are used as a contrast medium in colorectal imaging because of the high Z number of barium as well as the fact that it can’t be absorbed … otherwise most salts of barium are highly toxic). Once the precipitate is formed, one then decants and dries out the precipitate so that the actual weight of barium sulfate can be measured which is the used to calculate the mg/L (ppm) of sulfate.

But that’s not a test one can do at the poolside. It’s a lab based method.
TMI!!!
 
  • Haha
Reactions: JoyfulNoise
Thread Status
Hello , This thread has been inactive for over 60 days. New postings here are unlikely to be seen or responded to by other members. For better visibility, consider Starting A New Thread.