Alkalinity won’t rise above 90

tanksjeep

LifeTime Supporter
Sep 23, 2015
56
Lake Havasu City, AZ
Pool Size
12500
Surface
Plaster
Just had pool replastered 5 weeks ago and I realize that it’s common for the TA to be low but I’ve added about (10) 16 oz boxes of baking soda 1-2 at a time for several days and as expected, I’m struggling to keep the pH in check. It’s always around 8.2. Pool is about 12,500 gal and manually chlorinated. Still getting a small amount of ‘dust’ when brushing. Should I be concerned?
 
Low TA is good, high TA is bad.

You are past the plaster curing period.

TA of 90 is ok. TA of 50-70 is better.

Post a complete list of your water chemistry.

What test kit are you using?

You using PoolMath?

 
Low TA is good, high TA is bad.

You are past the plaster curing period.

TA of 90 is ok. TA of 50-70 is better.

Post a complete list of your water chemistry.

What test kit are you using?

You using PoolMath?

FC = 3.5
CYA = less than 20
pH = 8.2 (I’ve added acid since)
TA = 90
CH = 400
 

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Use these recommended levels...

 
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You have the relationship reversed.
Higher TA pushes pH to rise. You then add acid to lower pH, and it lowers TA A LITTLE BIT. But the pH bounces back up due to the still high TA. Your TA moves slowly lower and lower, after many rounds of acid adds. There will be a point where pH holds in the high 7 range for a comparatively longer period, therefor requiring less or even little acid. Likely somewhere in the 50-70 TA range.
Working against you is the high TA of the water you use to counter evaporation and other water loss. Due to that, it is very unlikely you ever will need to add anything to move TA higher. Just add water, if really needed!

And there is the balancing act with all the other parameters to keep your CSI in the correct range. Sometimes for that, you need to have the TA higher, as it is harder to change the other factors. Then you get to stay on the "add acid" train. But play with the CSI numbers in PoolMath, as CH, temp, pH and others all influence it too. So it can be like balancing a basketball on the end of a broom.
 
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Thank you! The second link is where I determined that I needed to
You have the relationship reversed.
Higher TA pushes pH to rise. You then add acid to lower pH, and it lowers TA A LITTLE BIT. But the pH bounces back up due to the still high TA. Your TA moves slowly lower and lower, after many rounds of acid adds. There will be a point where pH holds in the high 7 range for a comparatively longer period, therefor requiring less or even little acid. Likely somewhere in the 50-70 TA range.
Working against you is the high TA of the water you use to counter evaporation and other water loss. Due to that, it is very unlikely you ever will need to add anything to move TA higher. Just add water, if really needed!

And there is the balancing act with all the other parameters to keep your CSI in the correct range. Sometimes for that, you need to have the TA higher, as it is harder to change the other factors. Then you get to stay on the "add acid" train. But play with the CSI numbers in PoolMath, as CH, temp, pH and others all influence it too. So it can be like balancing a basketball on the end of a broom.
Thank you.
I guess I was trying too hard to stabilize my pH and thought that the low TA levels were the culprit causing me too add 10-15 oz of acid a day. I just never had to do this before the replaster.
 

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