- May 23, 2015
- 25,714
- Pool Size
- 16000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair Intellichlor IC-60
You need some. PB says they will treat to 20ppm at initial fill, but based on what I have learned here, 40-50 would be better here in Texas. Correct me if that is wrong. I just can't guess how long it will take to rise to that level based on the inconsistency of the information so far.
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What model pump did you get? Your pool is very similar in size to mine.
What you will likely experience is this. You're going to start off with 20ppm CYA in the water and lowest setting on your in-line chlorinator. Your FC is going to drop like a brick everyday down to 0ppm. It will drop because of normal chlorine loss to organics and sunlight (2-3ppm loss per day). You will then start to turn up your chlorinator to make the FC delivery rate higher. AT the same time your CYA will begin to increase since you are delivering both FC and CYA. Eventually you'll find a setting on the chlorinator that gets you to your 2-3ppm residual FC level (probably by delivering 6ppm/day of FC). As your CYA builds up and goes past the TFP recommended FC/CYA ratio, algae growth will become more likely. Remember that the TFP FC/CYA levels are based on the concentration of active chlorine (hypochlorous acid) that inhibits algae growth. It takes much more hypochlorous acid to inhibit/kill algae than it does other pathogens like bacteria and viruses. As your CYA climbs and algae blooms become possible, you will likely not seen green algae patches but mildly cloudy water. THAT is the start of an algae bloom and most people don't realize it. You will also notice and sizable jump in FC consumption rate. The old setting no longer delivers the FC needed to keep up. The solution most people go for is...tada....turn up the chlorinator. That then starts to deliver more FC but also more CYA exacerbating the problem. Finally, after weeks of cloudy water, the pool goes green and the pool stores start recommended all sorts of extreme measures (dichlor shock, cal-hypo shock, algaecides, clarifiers, etc).
It happens..... ALL. THE. TIME.
So, now that you know and now that you have your test kit, you can do the experiments yourself and see how quickly your CYA rises. Just remember that the TFP FC/CYA ratios are based on the science of chlorine disinfection. Going lower than the recommended levels will eventually lead to trouble. See how long the chlorinator can go for before you have to violate the FC/CYA ratio.