Wow, do I need your help! We have a brand-new pool and a lot of things going on. I’ll try to explain all of them since I’ve already learned enough here to know that one thing affects another then another.
OVERALL: The pool was filled 9/30/16. The builder said his crew would be responsible for taking care of the water for the first month. That didn’t involve much more than the delivery of a few pucks once a week, and a sequestrant put in right after the fill. The finish looks great (we’ve diligently brushed) and the water has been crystal clear. The builder turned on the SWG and heater yesterday, and we had pool school this morning, so everything’s now up to us.
TESTING #1: Even though the builder was still in the midst of taking care of things, I wanted to have a baseline set of numbers. On 10/16/16, while the water was still under the builder’s oversight, the numbers were:
FC: 6
CC: 0
PH: Didn’t even register on the lowest number
TA: 0
CYA: between 30 and 40
(Didn’t record the CH number at the time because it seemed impossibly high, which I’ll get back to below.)
The pebble manufacturer’s start-up procedure did say that the alkalinity and ph should be kept very low for the first month. Chlorine levels stayed between 5 and 7 throughout the month.
TESTING #2:
I did this test today, some of them twice just to be sure. Here’s what I have:
FC: 7
CC: 2
pH: Still under lowest number on test kit
TA: Still doesn’t register (sample turns pink immediately upon adding R-0008).
CH: 1600. Yes, 1600, even after repeating the test using the “fading endpoint” method. I also tested our fill water source (the outside spigot) and got 350.
SWG: 3600
Temp: 86
WHAT’S BEEN DONE, CHEMISTRY-WISE:
After some advice here from October, I removed the pucks the builder’s crew had been putting in the skimmer and put them in a floater.
Earlier today, I added about four pounds of Clorox pH Protect (pricey baking soda?) in an attempt to begin raising the TA. Later, after plugging numbers into Pool Math, I see that four pounds wouldn’t even make a dent, and of course it didn’t. What the addition of the powder DID do, however, was immediately and heavily cloud the pool. It’s been about six hours now, and it’s finally beginning to clear up. I added such a tiny bit because our pool is so small and I was afraid to do too much at once
What also happened after having added the baking soda: Giant white flakes shooting out of a couple of the returns and settling all over the bottom! We vacuumed them up and quite a few made it to the filter basket at the pump. This went on for a few hours. The filter has also been hosed down this afternoon, with lots of milky water coming out.
QUESTIONS:
1. I know we have to get that TA up asap. Will we just have to put up with the extreme cloudiness while we do that? Is the baking soda even what really caused the cloudiness and flakes?
2. How in the world did our CH get so off-the-charts high? Could it have been calcium coming out of the plaster as it’s been curing? I wonder if the combination of the baking soda and high CH may have gotten together to cause today's flakes.
3. I should focus on getting the alkalinity right before worrying about the pH, correct?
I apologize for the epic saga here, but we’re concerned about damage possibly being done to our equipment (particularly the SWG and the heater) and just want to make sure you experts have the information you need.
Thanks in advance! Halp!
Mary
OVERALL: The pool was filled 9/30/16. The builder said his crew would be responsible for taking care of the water for the first month. That didn’t involve much more than the delivery of a few pucks once a week, and a sequestrant put in right after the fill. The finish looks great (we’ve diligently brushed) and the water has been crystal clear. The builder turned on the SWG and heater yesterday, and we had pool school this morning, so everything’s now up to us.
TESTING #1: Even though the builder was still in the midst of taking care of things, I wanted to have a baseline set of numbers. On 10/16/16, while the water was still under the builder’s oversight, the numbers were:
FC: 6
CC: 0
PH: Didn’t even register on the lowest number
TA: 0
CYA: between 30 and 40
(Didn’t record the CH number at the time because it seemed impossibly high, which I’ll get back to below.)
The pebble manufacturer’s start-up procedure did say that the alkalinity and ph should be kept very low for the first month. Chlorine levels stayed between 5 and 7 throughout the month.
TESTING #2:
I did this test today, some of them twice just to be sure. Here’s what I have:
FC: 7
CC: 2
pH: Still under lowest number on test kit
TA: Still doesn’t register (sample turns pink immediately upon adding R-0008).
CH: 1600. Yes, 1600, even after repeating the test using the “fading endpoint” method. I also tested our fill water source (the outside spigot) and got 350.
SWG: 3600
Temp: 86
WHAT’S BEEN DONE, CHEMISTRY-WISE:
After some advice here from October, I removed the pucks the builder’s crew had been putting in the skimmer and put them in a floater.
Earlier today, I added about four pounds of Clorox pH Protect (pricey baking soda?) in an attempt to begin raising the TA. Later, after plugging numbers into Pool Math, I see that four pounds wouldn’t even make a dent, and of course it didn’t. What the addition of the powder DID do, however, was immediately and heavily cloud the pool. It’s been about six hours now, and it’s finally beginning to clear up. I added such a tiny bit because our pool is so small and I was afraid to do too much at once
What also happened after having added the baking soda: Giant white flakes shooting out of a couple of the returns and settling all over the bottom! We vacuumed them up and quite a few made it to the filter basket at the pump. This went on for a few hours. The filter has also been hosed down this afternoon, with lots of milky water coming out.
QUESTIONS:
1. I know we have to get that TA up asap. Will we just have to put up with the extreme cloudiness while we do that? Is the baking soda even what really caused the cloudiness and flakes?
2. How in the world did our CH get so off-the-charts high? Could it have been calcium coming out of the plaster as it’s been curing? I wonder if the combination of the baking soda and high CH may have gotten together to cause today's flakes.
3. I should focus on getting the alkalinity right before worrying about the pH, correct?
I apologize for the epic saga here, but we’re concerned about damage possibly being done to our equipment (particularly the SWG and the heater) and just want to make sure you experts have the information you need.
Thanks in advance! Halp!
Mary
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