Great job on the tactical refill. 
We'll look forward to seeing your new CYA numbers.
We'll look forward to seeing your new CYA numbers.
My understanding of slamming with mustard algae is you slam normal levels and at end of SLAM is when you raise to mustard algae level for 24 hours.
When testing your CYA, take it with back to sun. Put tube at waste level and body shading the tube. Fill it up in increments of 10 and then look. Don't stare the whole time. Do this and trust your own results. I'm sure pool store guy is trustworthy, but he isn't testing in natural light under the sun.
Also, always round your CYA up so for example, 45 is actually 50.
You can test FC levels 15-30minutes after you add your chlorine.
Our sun can take a pool from mustard slam to regular FC range at a particular CYA in under two days. I've seen it myself.
Have you performed an OCLT lately? Pool School - Perform the Overnight FC Loss Test (OCLT)
Cooler of beverage and some shade. May have to test/dose about every half hour to keep up with the loss at elevated FC.
Have fun!
High FC and low CYA is a losing combination. FC loss to sunlight is a percentage, not a fixed ppm, so the higher your FC, the more you lose.
For Arizona, I'd target 50 CYA minimum. If you overshoot by accident, 60 is still not outrageous for where you live, so long as you maintain proper FC/CYA ratio.
2-3 per day. Maybe 4 with intense sun and a lot of swimmers.I am currently at 50 for CYA. The pool calc says my FC should be between 4 and 8. If I am losing all that FC during the day. about 8ppm daily loss.
It doesn't seem feasible to be adding that much chlorine per day. what would be a more normal rate of loss?
2-3 per day. Maybe 4 with intense sun and a lot of swimmers.
Study on this awhile. It shows the half-life of FC at various CYA levels. You will see for yourself that you'll lose about half of whatever in less than 7 hours at 50 CYA. So if you double the FC, you'll lose twice as much. That's why you can't just figure at 3 per day, you can add 9 and ignore it for the next three days.
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Lots more if you're into that Pool Water ChemistryOOOoh! graphs. now you are speaking my language. I'll take a look. I do see what you are saying though. 1 standard number doesn't fit all scenarios. thanks.