I have a question about calcium precipitation in our pool.
It’s a 50,000L concrete pool with a two-year-old white cement PebbleSheen interior. The system includes a saltwater chlorine generator (salt at 3500 ppm) and a cartridge filter.
Current water chemistry:
pH: 7.8 (I generally allow it to sit here; if it rises higher, I bring it down to ~7.2)
TA: 60-70
FC: 4
CC: ~0
Phosphates: ~0
CYA: 30
Calcium hardness: 350
Salt: 3500
Saturation Index: Close to zero
There are fine calcium flakes and dust collecting below the return jets — likely from the chlorinator. More significantly, there’s a much finer calcium “dust”in the pool, causing persistent cloudiness and dull water. The water lacks sparkle, and the dust clogs the cartridge filter every few weeks. When I clean the filter, most of the material is this white powder, which im fairly sure is calcium deposits.
When I add Calstop, the problem disappears. No more flakes or dust. Water becomes clear again. Filter doesn’t clog for months
Eventually, though, Calstop stops working and the issue returns. I'd prefer a long-term fix without relying on chemical additives.
What’s driving the precipitation despite balanced water and an LSI near zero?
Is there a solution aside from calstop? Should I run the scaling index more negative?
Appreciate any insights.
It’s a 50,000L concrete pool with a two-year-old white cement PebbleSheen interior. The system includes a saltwater chlorine generator (salt at 3500 ppm) and a cartridge filter.
Current water chemistry:
pH: 7.8 (I generally allow it to sit here; if it rises higher, I bring it down to ~7.2)
TA: 60-70
FC: 4
CC: ~0
Phosphates: ~0
CYA: 30
Calcium hardness: 350
Salt: 3500
Saturation Index: Close to zero
There are fine calcium flakes and dust collecting below the return jets — likely from the chlorinator. More significantly, there’s a much finer calcium “dust”in the pool, causing persistent cloudiness and dull water. The water lacks sparkle, and the dust clogs the cartridge filter every few weeks. When I clean the filter, most of the material is this white powder, which im fairly sure is calcium deposits.
When I add Calstop, the problem disappears. No more flakes or dust. Water becomes clear again. Filter doesn’t clog for months
Eventually, though, Calstop stops working and the issue returns. I'd prefer a long-term fix without relying on chemical additives.
What’s driving the precipitation despite balanced water and an LSI near zero?
Is there a solution aside from calstop? Should I run the scaling index more negative?
Appreciate any insights.