- Nov 12, 2017
- 12,639
- Pool Size
- 12300
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair Intellichlor IC-40
Part 1
Hi all, what an amazing site. You've inspired me to take over my pool chemistry. I always suspected the previous crew was not doing it well. Now, after visiting here, I don't see how they possibly could have been. In fact, that same crew destroyed my plaster with an acid wash, necessitating replacement. I went with a micro pebble. I'm now in the throws of startup, which was kind of dumped into my lap by both the plaster co and my new maintenance co (old crew walked off the job after they burned the plaster).
The pool first filled on last Wednesday, so "Day 1" was Thursday. The new maintenance co did the "startup" that day, which consisted of a quick chem test and, in my opinion, a very hurried brushing. At that point, TA and pH were OK (city water). They did get the pump running, and convinced me to replace my cartridge filters. $400... poof!. As this was a three-day weekend, Days 2-4 of startup up were all on me! So I've been crash-coursing, trying to "do it right." Kind of overwhelmed at this point. My only resources (as both of my "pros" were out-of-touch this last weekend, were the handout left by the plaster guys, the internet and the local Leslies store. The little test kit the previous home owners left me was my entire suite of equipment. That and a brush, a couple bottles of MA and chlorine, left by the maintenance co. So...
Day 2 I noticed a spike it TA. Leslie's confirmed that, along with OK pH. I hadn't added chlorine at that point. Long story short, over the weekend I've done the following. I've been adding MA, 20oz at a time, first diluted in a 5-gal bucket of pool water, every 2 to 4 hours during the day. I brush a lot, and at least a little after every chem. I did so until the pH got to the 7ish level, then I started aerating. My first attempt was too little air, then I "Lowes'ed" some PVC into three sprayers, one on each return. That worked great. Skipping ahead... So over the weekend I added chlorine (Leslie's told me that waiting too long to chlorinate while trying to resolve a TA of 160 was worse than adding chlorine before everything's balanced, so I chlorinated.) Chlorine virtually disappeared over night. So I added liquid CYA yesterday, then more chlorine last night. MA treatments had to slow, because pH got too low. Late last night I added the sprayers, this morning pH is back up. Chlorine is OK, pH was back up, so I added more MA.
I plan on another Leslie's test later on, to confirm my readings. I've already ordered my K-2006 (and splurged for a magnetic stirrer). I also plan to just let the sprayers run, adding 20oz of MA every few hours until TA is at 80, all the while monitoring pH and chlorine to keep them within range. Once the TA is good, I'll let the sprayers run until I get to 7.5. So far so good?
I think I may have made one mistake, though (assuming the above is OK). When adding the liquid CYA, I first poured it into a bucket of pool water (like I've been doing with both the acid and the chlorine). I mixed it into the bucket, then poured it around the pool's edge (again, just as I've been doing with the MA and Chlorine). Very milky substance. (Was that right?) Then, as per the CYA bottle's instructions, I filled the bottle with pool water, swished it around, and dumped that into the pool. Yikes! Super milky! Uh, oh. I missed the part to shake the bottle first!! So, between the milky 5-gal and the very milky bottle remains, I noticed some "milk" laying on the pool floor. I brushed and brushed until nothing clouded up in front of the brush, but it did take some time to get around the pool to the spot where I dumped the bottle's remains. This morning I'm looking at a slightly light patch, about the size of a couple of hand prints, right around where I dumped the bottle. Even though I swished those remains in the bottle, and brushed it away, maybe 10-15 minutes later, could I have stained my new pebble with CYA? Or did I just not notice that light spot previously? Oh well, I'm doing the best I can.
Short version: I'm trying to add the bare minimum of chemicals, over time, and diluted, to bring my water to spec. Any advice?
Part 2
Because my CH is already at 310 (city water), I have this idea that I should connect my autofill to my whole-house filter/softener setup. I can do the plumbing, and was planning to do so today. But then I figured I should throw that idea out here first. I'm thinking that filtered soft water would help with my chemistry over time, but then I remembered... This will be a salt water pool in 30 days, with my Pentair generator already in place. If I'm topping off with soft water, will that eventually drag my saltwater ppm out of spec? And which is worse, the CH building up over time from city water, or salt building up over time from the softener? I figure, either way, partial water changes are in my future. But which water source would necessitate one sooner?
Sidebar: my plaster guy thinks a partial water change, maybe 50%, once a year, should be regular pool maintenance. He says that's what he does. Leslie's says no, they want to pump chems into the water to trap calcium and keep it off my edge tile that way. I'm determined to try to use only salt, CYA, MA and chlorine in my saltwater pool, unless you guys here advise otherwise. Do my own tests. Tweak my own chems.
Thoughts on the soft water auto-fill scheme? Thoughts on regular partial water changes (I was thinking every November)? Thoughts on my CYA stain? Or startup scheme? Any help would be much appreciated!!
Hi all, what an amazing site. You've inspired me to take over my pool chemistry. I always suspected the previous crew was not doing it well. Now, after visiting here, I don't see how they possibly could have been. In fact, that same crew destroyed my plaster with an acid wash, necessitating replacement. I went with a micro pebble. I'm now in the throws of startup, which was kind of dumped into my lap by both the plaster co and my new maintenance co (old crew walked off the job after they burned the plaster).
The pool first filled on last Wednesday, so "Day 1" was Thursday. The new maintenance co did the "startup" that day, which consisted of a quick chem test and, in my opinion, a very hurried brushing. At that point, TA and pH were OK (city water). They did get the pump running, and convinced me to replace my cartridge filters. $400... poof!. As this was a three-day weekend, Days 2-4 of startup up were all on me! So I've been crash-coursing, trying to "do it right." Kind of overwhelmed at this point. My only resources (as both of my "pros" were out-of-touch this last weekend, were the handout left by the plaster guys, the internet and the local Leslies store. The little test kit the previous home owners left me was my entire suite of equipment. That and a brush, a couple bottles of MA and chlorine, left by the maintenance co. So...
Day 2 I noticed a spike it TA. Leslie's confirmed that, along with OK pH. I hadn't added chlorine at that point. Long story short, over the weekend I've done the following. I've been adding MA, 20oz at a time, first diluted in a 5-gal bucket of pool water, every 2 to 4 hours during the day. I brush a lot, and at least a little after every chem. I did so until the pH got to the 7ish level, then I started aerating. My first attempt was too little air, then I "Lowes'ed" some PVC into three sprayers, one on each return. That worked great. Skipping ahead... So over the weekend I added chlorine (Leslie's told me that waiting too long to chlorinate while trying to resolve a TA of 160 was worse than adding chlorine before everything's balanced, so I chlorinated.) Chlorine virtually disappeared over night. So I added liquid CYA yesterday, then more chlorine last night. MA treatments had to slow, because pH got too low. Late last night I added the sprayers, this morning pH is back up. Chlorine is OK, pH was back up, so I added more MA.
I plan on another Leslie's test later on, to confirm my readings. I've already ordered my K-2006 (and splurged for a magnetic stirrer). I also plan to just let the sprayers run, adding 20oz of MA every few hours until TA is at 80, all the while monitoring pH and chlorine to keep them within range. Once the TA is good, I'll let the sprayers run until I get to 7.5. So far so good?
I think I may have made one mistake, though (assuming the above is OK). When adding the liquid CYA, I first poured it into a bucket of pool water (like I've been doing with both the acid and the chlorine). I mixed it into the bucket, then poured it around the pool's edge (again, just as I've been doing with the MA and Chlorine). Very milky substance. (Was that right?) Then, as per the CYA bottle's instructions, I filled the bottle with pool water, swished it around, and dumped that into the pool. Yikes! Super milky! Uh, oh. I missed the part to shake the bottle first!! So, between the milky 5-gal and the very milky bottle remains, I noticed some "milk" laying on the pool floor. I brushed and brushed until nothing clouded up in front of the brush, but it did take some time to get around the pool to the spot where I dumped the bottle's remains. This morning I'm looking at a slightly light patch, about the size of a couple of hand prints, right around where I dumped the bottle. Even though I swished those remains in the bottle, and brushed it away, maybe 10-15 minutes later, could I have stained my new pebble with CYA? Or did I just not notice that light spot previously? Oh well, I'm doing the best I can.
Short version: I'm trying to add the bare minimum of chemicals, over time, and diluted, to bring my water to spec. Any advice?
Part 2
Because my CH is already at 310 (city water), I have this idea that I should connect my autofill to my whole-house filter/softener setup. I can do the plumbing, and was planning to do so today. But then I figured I should throw that idea out here first. I'm thinking that filtered soft water would help with my chemistry over time, but then I remembered... This will be a salt water pool in 30 days, with my Pentair generator already in place. If I'm topping off with soft water, will that eventually drag my saltwater ppm out of spec? And which is worse, the CH building up over time from city water, or salt building up over time from the softener? I figure, either way, partial water changes are in my future. But which water source would necessitate one sooner?
Sidebar: my plaster guy thinks a partial water change, maybe 50%, once a year, should be regular pool maintenance. He says that's what he does. Leslie's says no, they want to pump chems into the water to trap calcium and keep it off my edge tile that way. I'm determined to try to use only salt, CYA, MA and chlorine in my saltwater pool, unless you guys here advise otherwise. Do my own tests. Tweak my own chems.
Thoughts on the soft water auto-fill scheme? Thoughts on regular partial water changes (I was thinking every November)? Thoughts on my CYA stain? Or startup scheme? Any help would be much appreciated!!