OK. I am the guy with the mucky pool.
I have confirmed the fact that the 7800 ppm TDS is salt, using a NaCl-only test strip. I know they are RnR but it's close to my TDS meter reading and so way out of the ball park that it does not matter.
The PH is 7.4 Yay!
But that is jumping about. It was 6.5 a couple of days back. But according to my test kit, the TA is HIGH ????
- however I have dumped a heap (10,000 litres?) of scheme water in there, and that is slightly alkaline.
Everything else is sick.
CYA = 0
TA = 200
PH = 7.4-7.5
Free Cl = 0
Total Cl= 0
- I bought some liquid chlorine only yesterday, to use until my chlorinator arrives
Total Hardness = 800
- I am assuming that this is because the calcium hypochlorite has been used excessively (dozens of 10Kg packs around the place empty.) Just constant powdered chlorine. No filtering, no backwashing. Dump in tonnes of salt, and you have a "salt water pool"
Now I am assuming (sadly) that the only way to get rid of the salt and Calcium is to dump half the water?
Can I live with the salt and use something else to kill the hardness? I would allow the salt to fall by backwash and *I assume that the chlorinator will also gradually use it up when it makes chlorine that then goes away.
Desperately yours. Help appreciated.
I have confirmed the fact that the 7800 ppm TDS is salt, using a NaCl-only test strip. I know they are RnR but it's close to my TDS meter reading and so way out of the ball park that it does not matter.
The PH is 7.4 Yay!
But that is jumping about. It was 6.5 a couple of days back. But according to my test kit, the TA is HIGH ????
- however I have dumped a heap (10,000 litres?) of scheme water in there, and that is slightly alkaline.
Everything else is sick.
CYA = 0
TA = 200
PH = 7.4-7.5
Free Cl = 0
Total Cl= 0
- I bought some liquid chlorine only yesterday, to use until my chlorinator arrives
Total Hardness = 800
- I am assuming that this is because the calcium hypochlorite has been used excessively (dozens of 10Kg packs around the place empty.) Just constant powdered chlorine. No filtering, no backwashing. Dump in tonnes of salt, and you have a "salt water pool"

Now I am assuming (sadly) that the only way to get rid of the salt and Calcium is to dump half the water?
Can I live with the salt and use something else to kill the hardness? I would allow the salt to fall by backwash and *I assume that the chlorinator will also gradually use it up when it makes chlorine that then goes away.
Desperately yours. Help appreciated.