I can it at your house..........."Boys I need you to get a pebble off the bottom of the pool." They will stare at you NOT really understanding your mean then can GET IN THE POOL!!!! Then there will be a mad scramble to get their suits on! LOL
I can it at your house..........."Boys I need you to get a pebble off the bottom of the pool." They will stare at you NOT really understanding your mean then can GET IN THE POOL!!!! Then there will be a mad scramble to get their suits on! LOL
Love your small pool! We chose light stone around are pool as well. I love the glass pool walls so awesome.
YAY!! That's what it's all about![]()
If it was mine, I'd leave it alone. There's several numbers working together to balance the water relative to the best numbers for your plaster. pH, TA and temperature have the greatest effect, and CH, CYA and salt all have a bit less effect. Your water is in the perfect range now because TA is a bit high. TA will drift down from the acid additions, but slowly right now because the curing plaster is contributing TA to the water. After the TA comes down, I'd reconsider adding a bit of CH. In the meantime, targeting a pH of 7.6 would be technically a bit better, but it's OK at 7.5. If you stop heating and let the water cool to whatever nature delivers, that might also be a trigger to add some calcium or let your pH drift up to more like 7.8
So short version is... TA is a bit higher than TFP range, so it's OK that CH is a bit lower than TFP range.
Did you find any de to add to the sand? That will help your sand clear it up faster. Have you backwashed yet? I can't remember. If not I would do so. Make sure to read the directions. I did not and did not rinse after my first backwash.
Kim![]()