I would get everything perfect now and then close with a solid cover.
This way, you can avoid the drain and refill in the spring.
This way, you can avoid the drain and refill in the spring.
An even better idea..... text any chemical readings I take to BOTH the pool company owner AND the Board President. This way, the person with overall responsibility for everything at the Association (including how the pool is being maintained) get the water chemistry readings and everything will be transparent. If the person(s) responsible for pool maintenance at the condo had been doing this, the pool would have been shut down long ago until the pool company addressed the CYA issue.
Also, I plan to ask the Board President for a meeting with the head of the pool company managing the pool to see if we are on the same page with respect to ideal water chemistry (and other maintenance issues).
Until the norovirus outbreak...While the pool may be your primary concern it is low on the Boards worry list.
First time I tested, FC was at 10.5, so it's possible that the pool company had just "shocked" the pool that day. I like James W suggestion to see if I can advocate for change to SWG. That seems like it might be the best solution. Otherwise, I would try to have an understanding with pool company that we will be working to maintain CYA at 30-40 and FC at 4 (since that's the upper limit per regs). I knwo the only way to do that is with liquid chlorine additions daily, which I am willing to do. I'll know soon how my attempts to be helpful are received by the group. Will keep you posted.....One big issue I would see having read the information James posted and from what I've heard anecdotally here on the site, might be worth trying to internalize and use to educate the folks on the board who "own" the pool.
TFP recommendations are based on the new (correct, based on science) data around water sanitization and FC/CYA balance. Pool stores, dippy strips, and code enforcement is often based on the "old school" use of a hard-line acceptable range of FC in the pool, which ignores the actual disinfectant level of chlorine at whatever level of CYA. Many newcomers balk at the levels of FC and CYA levels we recommend, because the institutional knowledge is based on a service that needs to "shock" the pool weekly to destroy biological growth that will almost certainly appear with rising CYA and a statutory maximum 4ppm FC. Very quickly this becomes untenable. As is, and barring any other regulations that apply that James didn't share, it looks like SOME of the TFP recommendations could be followed, but not all. The margin looks pretty thin. As soon as your pool reaches 50ppm CYA, you're probably not going to be able to keep it safe for you and your neighbors to use the pool, given bather load and loss to sunlight.
View attachment 371401
Also, consider the rule that says, "Shock to 10ppm FC. The math is simple: you'll not reach SLAM level following that rule unless you keep the pool at 20ppm CYA.
View attachment 371402
For what it's worth now you've at least got the CYA 50ppm maximum to hold folks to and helping the board understand how limiting a pool with 50cya to 4ppm FC creates an unsanitary condition. We're allowed to put more FC in our pools because it's proven to be safe. But it might be against the law in your situaiton if someone wanted to squawk about it.
BUT..... they need to know what's going on at their pool and start addressing it.
BTW, what would be the approximate cost of conversion to SWG for a 60,000 gallon pool?
yeah, no clue. you'll be up in the big-leagues with a commercial solution, probably at least 2 cells. That's a herculean amount of chlorine to add by hand, 60k pool with sunlight and a regular swimmer load. It'd almost certainly be more economical and safe in the long run to go the SWG route. If not, you might push for a chlorine pump system that doses smaller amounts throughout the day, but I also have no experience there.Probably around $5K - $7K in pool company $.
To get everything perfect now with CYA at 180, they would need to drain about 50,000 of the 60,000 gallon pool, correct? Then refill, balance chemicals, then drain again (in a couple weeks) to get water below the return lines. It seems to me that, one way or another, they are going to dump about 60,000 gallons of water.... either now or in the spring. Please correct me if I'm missing something.I would get everything perfect now and then close with a solid cover.
This way, you can avoid the drain and refill in the spring.
With a solid cover, you don't want to drain below the returns.then drain again (in a couple weeks) to get water below the return lines.