I've been sitting in the back pew of the Church of TFP for a few years and just moved down to the front pew. Now, I want to make sure I'm singing out of the correct hymn book. (Eye rolls are OK from anyone not from Texas or the South
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Background: A few weeks ago, my pool was Army green -- something that the Creature from the Black Lagoon may not dive into. I'll skip the pool store experience, but after some improvement, I got my TF-100 and now feel somewhat empowered. I have been SLAM-ing for about 8 days, and thanks to the great resources in this forum, think I have been doing it somewhat correctly. My pool is now aqua (an improvement) but cloudy. It is clear down to about two feet. My CYA is 40 and my SLAM target is 16. I have been adding liquid chlorine -- 10.0% from WalMart, Pool Essentials brand, date code 5/6/2021. I use the PoolMath app for the amount of liquid chlorine to add. Pump is running 24/7 and filter pressure is good and stable. I have been adding liquid chlorine at the return jets, often walking around the pool to add it at other return jets. During the day, I know I've been fighting the Texas sun (in addition to any "non-sun matters"). My pool is in the sun about 75% of daylight hours. The process seems to be a see-saw process, but I'm patient. For FC testing, I use the FAS-DPD test. I love it, because it makes me feel like a scientist, especially when using ml.
Question 1, Loss of FC Overnight: I decided to do an OCLT to get a better handle on any non-sun issues. Yesterday, I tested FC and added my last dose of liquid chlorine at 6:45 pm. The sun was not on my pool. Then I tested the FC two hours later at 8:45 pm and it was exactly 16, my SLAM target. This morning at 7:00 am with no sun, I tested FC and it was 11.5, or an overnight loss of 4.5ppm. I know I still have leaves on the bottom at the deep end but I can't see the bottom. Days ago, I tried to gently scoop them out and was somewhat successful but not enough. Plus scooping, no matter how gentle, will stir up stuff. There are no signs of algae, either in the corners, on steps, or on the light as far as I can tell. I am thinking the leaves may be the problem and I need to get them out, no matter how much debris is stirred up. Does this sound correct or do you have any other recommendations?
I was also interested in how much my FC was decreasing during the day, knowing that it's a combination of sun and non-sun matters. Yesterday morning, I added my recommended amount of liquid chlorine (after which FC reached 15.5) and, without adding any more, simply re-tested FC every couple of hours. My FC dropped in amount of 3.0ppm, 2.0ppm, 1.5ppm, and 2.0ppm during the day. These numbers are probably meaningless since the sun was at work, but I'm including them for what it's worth.
Question 2, Time it Takes for Liquid Chlorine to Adequately Spread: This is a random question, but in my situation (30K gal pool, pump running) about how long does it take for liquid chlorine to adequately spread, i.e., so you can get a correct reading putting the graduated cylinder most anywhere along the edge of the pool. If the answer depends on quantity added, please assume 128 oz. are added. In TFP I have read to wait 30 minutes after your last addition of chemicals to test FC for an OCLT, so I'm wondering if 30 minutes is the standard. It seems a bit short to me.
Thank you in advance for your help. TFP is awesome!
Glenn
Background: A few weeks ago, my pool was Army green -- something that the Creature from the Black Lagoon may not dive into. I'll skip the pool store experience, but after some improvement, I got my TF-100 and now feel somewhat empowered. I have been SLAM-ing for about 8 days, and thanks to the great resources in this forum, think I have been doing it somewhat correctly. My pool is now aqua (an improvement) but cloudy. It is clear down to about two feet. My CYA is 40 and my SLAM target is 16. I have been adding liquid chlorine -- 10.0% from WalMart, Pool Essentials brand, date code 5/6/2021. I use the PoolMath app for the amount of liquid chlorine to add. Pump is running 24/7 and filter pressure is good and stable. I have been adding liquid chlorine at the return jets, often walking around the pool to add it at other return jets. During the day, I know I've been fighting the Texas sun (in addition to any "non-sun matters"). My pool is in the sun about 75% of daylight hours. The process seems to be a see-saw process, but I'm patient. For FC testing, I use the FAS-DPD test. I love it, because it makes me feel like a scientist, especially when using ml.
Question 1, Loss of FC Overnight: I decided to do an OCLT to get a better handle on any non-sun issues. Yesterday, I tested FC and added my last dose of liquid chlorine at 6:45 pm. The sun was not on my pool. Then I tested the FC two hours later at 8:45 pm and it was exactly 16, my SLAM target. This morning at 7:00 am with no sun, I tested FC and it was 11.5, or an overnight loss of 4.5ppm. I know I still have leaves on the bottom at the deep end but I can't see the bottom. Days ago, I tried to gently scoop them out and was somewhat successful but not enough. Plus scooping, no matter how gentle, will stir up stuff. There are no signs of algae, either in the corners, on steps, or on the light as far as I can tell. I am thinking the leaves may be the problem and I need to get them out, no matter how much debris is stirred up. Does this sound correct or do you have any other recommendations?
I was also interested in how much my FC was decreasing during the day, knowing that it's a combination of sun and non-sun matters. Yesterday morning, I added my recommended amount of liquid chlorine (after which FC reached 15.5) and, without adding any more, simply re-tested FC every couple of hours. My FC dropped in amount of 3.0ppm, 2.0ppm, 1.5ppm, and 2.0ppm during the day. These numbers are probably meaningless since the sun was at work, but I'm including them for what it's worth.
Question 2, Time it Takes for Liquid Chlorine to Adequately Spread: This is a random question, but in my situation (30K gal pool, pump running) about how long does it take for liquid chlorine to adequately spread, i.e., so you can get a correct reading putting the graduated cylinder most anywhere along the edge of the pool. If the answer depends on quantity added, please assume 128 oz. are added. In TFP I have read to wait 30 minutes after your last addition of chemicals to test FC for an OCLT, so I'm wondering if 30 minutes is the standard. It seems a bit short to me.
Thank you in advance for your help. TFP is awesome!
Glenn
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