- May 31, 2022
- 674
- Pool Size
- 8000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair Intellichlor IC-20
I've been using a HASA liquid chlorine feeder for a few weeks. Something is precipitating out of the liquid in the tank and settling at the bottom -- there's already a half-inch layer of it. The HASA patent says that this is NaCl, but I can't test it because I don't want to disturb the chlorine layer. Regardless, HASA says it's expected and doesn't hurt anything.
But here's my problem: Something is also precipitating out of solution in the outlet tubing from the feeder. The tubing is only 3/8" OD, and the flow through it is gentle and for only 5 hours/day, so the precipitate eventually clogs the hose.
I see no similar precipitate elsewhere in the pool plumbing (or in the pool), although of course the rest of the plumbing has MUCH larger cross-section and flow rate.
The precipitate is white. I thought it might be the same salt that's accumulating at the bottom of the tank, but vinegar reacts with it. Unfortunately, I don't know anything about chemistry, so the only idea that that reaction gave me was calcium carbonate.
My pool water CH is 500. Does concentrated liquid chlorine make dissolved calcium fall out of solution somehow? What could this precipitate be?
But here's my problem: Something is also precipitating out of solution in the outlet tubing from the feeder. The tubing is only 3/8" OD, and the flow through it is gentle and for only 5 hours/day, so the precipitate eventually clogs the hose.
I see no similar precipitate elsewhere in the pool plumbing (or in the pool), although of course the rest of the plumbing has MUCH larger cross-section and flow rate.
The precipitate is white. I thought it might be the same salt that's accumulating at the bottom of the tank, but vinegar reacts with it. Unfortunately, I don't know anything about chemistry, so the only idea that that reaction gave me was calcium carbonate.
My pool water CH is 500. Does concentrated liquid chlorine make dissolved calcium fall out of solution somehow? What could this precipitate be?