- Jul 21, 2013
- 65,425
- Pool Size
- 35000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair Intellichlor IC-60
I'll get out there when the rain lightens up! I'm not adding any more salt until I get the pool to the correct level. I bought 3 more gallons of chlorine this morning since it's going to be raining all week and that SWG is probably NOT getting turned on!I just drained an inch of water from my pool.
How much water was taken out when the pool was closed last fall? How much rain, snow fell in the meantime. What kind of cover, if any? If solid tarp, did you pump off the collected water or dump it in the pool?No, it's an AG pool and the only drain is the skimmer oozing. This skimmer kind of locks into place vs our old skimmer which just sat on top, both were/are Hayward. My water is sitting at the top of the skimmer opening and when it's not raining I see water dripping from the bottom of the piping at the skimmer and it is at the top of the finger hole. Other than the oozing I am not losing water and haven't had to fill the pool since startup. I have been waiting to vacuum the pool and backwash the filter (filter is sitting at 17 PSI which is the same as startup).
Last night and this morning I attributed both readings to possible non mixing of water types, not sure how much mixing is needed. Could my reagents be bad? Yes they could but they sit in a dark, coolish basement inside their blue Taylor box. I bought them last July from tftestkit and their dates are OK, one is in 2024 and one is 8/2023. I don't think reagents go bad quickly after their "use by" date.
This is the first year of ever using salt, I want to develop the knowledge to feel confident that having a SWG was/is worth it. I'm not new to testing the TFP way, been doing it forever but this has thrown me for a loop.
What everyone is saying that there was more rainwater than I expected is probably true. I expected my first salt reading that I started this thread to be around 2000 not 1200 or 1400. I expected this morning's reading to be 2600 or 2800 not 2200. But again I have no clue how much rain fell and water oozed out.
We opened it mid May, put in enough water to get to the top side screw on the Hayward wide mouth skimmer, added salt but have been using Liquid chlorine as I bought 4 gallons thinking I would need to fight something that happened through the winter - NOPE! I just used the last of it yesterday but bought 3 more until I get this SWG going. I did backwash my filter once early in the season just to see how much crud it got, I think I added water then. I have a blue solar cover on, here in Jersey we have had a lot of rain and the only draining is the oozing of water from the skimmer, the water level is at the top frame of the skimmer hole where the weir is. Other than rain, I have not added water. I am using the Taylor salt drop test kit.How much water was taken out when the pool was closed last fall? How much rain, snow fell in the meantime. What kind of cover, if any? If solid tarp, did you pump off the collected water or dump it in the pool?
I drained to just under the return, I used an Aquador skimmer plate (it's like a Tupperware lid for the pool skimmer) and a return plug in the return, took the pipes off and emptied the filter. Typical closing for me except hard piping vs hoses that I had in my last pool. Used a solid winter cover and did have to drain the cover a few times over the winter when the ice thawed.So when you closed last winter you did not drain a few inches below the lowest return? For me that's around 25% so CYA and salt will be down by at least that much. I know plenty in the North just use a skimmer plate and plug and not drain with no issues. I always plan to, but then chicken out.
Which did you do? And did you cover with mesh or solid cover for the winter?
Regardless though there seems to be something going on that is not adding up based on the latest results.
Bad regents seem highly unlikely given the age and how you stored them.
Double check that you are following testing procedure correctly, be deliberate.
Clean the testing vial with bleach or rubbing alcohol to rule out something that may be interfering with the test.
The salt test is actually a little different than other drop tests in that you aren't waiting for the final color change but the gross looking milky salmon color that happens just after the yellow.
It's gotta be something with the tests or more water replacement than assumed so checking some of the less common items.
The last test I did it twice and both times I stopped at 21 drops. I believe I did test twice a second time.Maybe try running test twice in a row, see if you get consistent results.
Do you have a speed stir? Makes this test soo much easier to do. Same for FC test.
How much salt have you added this season, total?
Randy
@JoyfulNoise I'll do that. Is it possible for water to be that stratified with a skimmer taking in surface water and the return facing down and a fair amount of moving water? I was going to wait until the end of this season to get next season's testing chemicals but I'll order them now so they should come in by the weekend.Can you take a long PVC pipe (1/2" or 3/4" pipe) and sample the water at the bottom of the pool. Just use it like a drinking straw - put your thumb over one end, plunge the pipe into the water so that the open end is near the bottom, then release your thumb. As soon as the water rushes out the top, put your thumb back over it, lift/rotate the open end out of the water and then let the water you collected drain into a large container. All the water collected from the pipe is from the bottom of the pool.
Also, get a SpeedStir ... you will kick yourself for not having one for so long ...
At this point I'm not confident in the whole process and I am trying to order more reagents .... seems TFTestkits is down or something. I plan on trying what JoyfulNoise suggested with getting water from the bottom to see if that's any different. Some of the readings seemed consistent with salt addition but I don't have a clue what to think. I'm confident in testing, done it for a long time - drop tests are fairly easy- but not salt as this is my first year. Can having a solar cover on all the time cause issues with mixing salt water even though it seems like it doesn't affect other chemicals. Pump is on for 13 hours a day and after almost 2 days it should be 100% mixed in my mind. My ladder which is totally opposite of the filter is causing mixing currents based on my thermometer being pushed away from the ladder and the debris floating by on the floor.I rinse the pill in the vial the same way you described rinsing the vial only so I don't think it will be much extra work and should improve testing consistency.
At this point, it sounds like you are confident in the 4000 reading and don't want to test your SWCG with that high of a salt reading. That's reasonable. You'll need to exchange water to bring the salt levels down to the preferred range.