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waterbear

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Posts posted by waterbear

  1. Hi I currently use bromine as a sanitizer in my hot tub and this summer we have plans to put in a pool. Should I be switching my sanitizer to chlorine in my hot tub also? If people swim in chlorine and then use the hot tub will it have a bad reaction with the bromine? Any info would be appreciated as I would like to make the switch beforehand if need be.

    The small amount of bromine carried into to the pool by bathers that are in the hot tub should not have any negative conswquences. You could convert the hot tub to chlorine. Many people succcessfully run chlorine tubs. They tend to have less of a chemical smell and are less expensive to maintain.

    If you decide to stick with bromine in the tub I wouldn't lose any sleep over it. The worst that can happen is it can create a bit of a temporary chlorine demand in the pool. Sodium bromide is used in chlorine pools as an algicide, besides being used to establish a bromide reserve in the water of a bromine spa on each refill.

  2. I never heard of adding Dawn dishwasher detergent to a pool. Wouldn't that create a lot of bubbles, and wouldn't the phosphates induce aglie (or is that why you would mix it with an agleicide?). Also comercial soaps have dyes, and sents added, stuff that just can't be good for water chemistry. I'd hold off on the detergent until someone who has a bit more expereince in this area can chime in.

    Another poster waterbear that was around a while ago seemed to have a better understanding of water chemistry, perhaps if he is stil around he could give his opinion?

    Thye Dawn would reduce the surfact tension of the water and the bugs would not be able to 'walk' on the water surface and would sink and drown. However I would not suggest adding Dawn to your pool unless you want a bubble bath. You can achieve the same results with tile soap squirted across the surface of the water. Tile soap is very low foaming.

    Bioguard Back Up is a linear quaterinary algaecide. The quatinary compounds are a class of detergent known as cationic surfactants. I am assuming it would also reduce the surface tension of the water and cause the bugs to sink and drown, especially in conjunction with another wetting agent such as tile soap. Be aware that linear quats are the type of algaecides that foam so they might not be much better than using Dawn!

    I'm still around! ;)

  3. First step to determine if you have a leak or just evaporation is a bucket test. Take a 5 gal plastic bucket and fill it about 1/2 to 3/4 full of pool water and place it on the steps of the pool (or if there are no steps on the deck next to the pool) and mark the water level in the bucket. Also mark the water level in the pool (The skimmer is a good choice for this. I use either a marker or a piece of tape for marking). Now wait for the water in the pool to go down and measure how much it has gone down. Do the same in the bucket. If the pool has gone down much more than the bucket then there is a leak. If they both are close in the amount of water lost then it is just evaporation.

    Good candidates to check for leaks, short of a tear in the actual liner, are around the skimmer, lights, and the light niche itself.

  4. Hi,

    If you have a salt pool, there is absolutely no

    way the chlorinator can produce any chlorine if you

    have no salt.

    That's if you have a salt pool. If it is not salt

    do exactly what waterbear has suggested.

    Regards,

    Michael Silvester

    If you read the first post they say that they have an automatic chlorinator turned all the way up (inline or offline chlorinator) with three STICK (of trichlor) also in the skimmer basket. There is no mention of a SWG. Also no salt reading was ever given but a TDS of 800 ppm was! Makes it pretty clear that this pool is on trichlor and NOT a SWG!

  5. Calm Down Waterbear...You might blow a gasket :P

    Sand Filter = 60 microns (With sand)

    Cartridge = 20 microns

    D.E Filter = 6 Microns

    For the newbies out there the smaller the number the better

    the filter is at picking up smaller particles.

    To me the choice is simple, and this is my personal

    opinion only.

    I would go with a sand filter and fill it with something

    like zeolite or zelbrite (volcanic medium) as this will

    filter to about 3 microns according to some manufacturers.

    Combine that high quality filtering with the ease of backwashing

    and your set!

    Regards,

    Michael Silvester

    Zeobrite (zeollite filter medium), the next great hope, or is that hoax? some facts:

    While it is true that zeolite has 'pores' in it that are micron sized the actual grains are bigger than sand grains for the most part. The rougher surface of the zeolite might catch a few extra particles so this should be a break even but water is NOT going to filter through it. In a pressurized ( or a non pressurized for that matter) filter water is going to take the path of least resistance, which would be AROUND the grains and not through them.

    If you want fine filering and water polishing with a sand filter there is a very old trick of adding a bit of DE to the skimmer (enough to increase your filter pressure about 1 psi).. You are now filtering THROUGH DE. (Sand filters work better when the sand is slightly dirty so you have'dirtied' the sand). This DE will wash out on the next backwash but it is a simple and cheap solutions. Let's look at the costs. 50 lbs of filter sand cost between $6 and $10 dollars in most places. Zeolite filter medium weighs less for the same volume so approximately 1/2 the weight is needed. A 50 l b bag of the stuff goes for beteen $30 and $60 dollars so the equivalent 100 lbs of sand would cost you beteeen $12 and $20 dollars. Now let's throw in that bag of DE powder.A 5 lb bag goes for about $7 dollars (enough to last for quite a long time with a sand filter) and you can get a 25 lb bag for about $25 dollars. At the highest prices for 200 lb sand we are now up to $65 dollars with enough DE to literally last for years. The Zeolite media will cost in the neighborhood of around $100.

    Now, let's get down to the nitty gritty of ammonia scavaging. This is the REAL reason to use Zeolite, right?

    Well Zeolite has been used in fresh water aquariums for years for this very purpose and any aquairist can tell you it's ammonia scavaging properties are quickly depleted!. But it can be regenerated! You have to mix ujp a concentrated salt solution (which is why it is not used in salt water aquariums and is probably of limited benifit in pools with s SWG) and to save time in the cleaning process you might use this regeneration solution to mix up the sand bed cleaner solution so you only have to do this once instead of twice every 6 months! (remember, those tiny pores in the zeolite will clog up). You now have an acidic salt solution to dispose of. Backwash it into the lawn? Down the sewer? Into a drum to get carted away as hazardous waste?

    (If you are maintaining a proper chlorine level for your CYA level and shock whenever your combined chlorine is above .5 ppm then what is the big deal about ammonia scavaging anyway?)

    Now let's look at deep cleaning a sand filter (and yes they need it maybe yearly or so). You open the filter to expose the sand, stick a garden hose into it and turn it on. The sand will loosen and the dirt will overflow out of the filter. CAREFULLY use something like a broom handle to break up clumps and channeling (be very careful not to damage the laterals). When the water is running clear you are done, REassemble the filter and backwash again and recharge with DE and you are good to go. IF you notice a scale builup while doing this THEN it is time to break out the acid filter cleaner and clean your sand bed chemically.

    Personally, I have a single element, oversized cartridge filter on my pool for the best compromise between water polishing and ease of maintenance. My filter would probably take over a year (and I have a 9 month swim season and the pool is not closed for the other 3) before I got any appreciable rise in filter pressure. I do clean my cart monthly however to make the maintenance go fast. It takes me between 15-20 minutes a month to open my filter, take out the dirty cart, drop in a clean one (I have 2 and rotate them), close the filter, clean out the pump basket, and hose off the dirty cart. I soak one cart in the spring and one in the fall so each get their yearly over night soak. I admit it's a bit more work than a sand filter but the water is almost as polished as a DE filter and THOSE are a lot of work. They really should be broken down to be cleaned, not backwashed or bumped but I'll save that for another thread!

  6. I have a k-2006 service kit for my pool. What extra do I need for my hot tub which uses bromine?

    Purchase a Taylor K-1517A (or K-1517C if you want the 2 oz bottle of titrant) which is the FAS-DPD test for bromine. The difference between the chlorine test and the bromine test is that the bromine test uses R-872 reagent for the titrant and the chlorine test uses R-871 and also uses R-0003 reagent. Both use exactly the same DPD powder. When testing bromine only total bromine is tested so there is only one titration necessary.

    The tests for pH, acid and base demand, total alkalinity, and calcium hardness are identical for both chlorine and bromine and are exactly the same in the K-2006 kit for chlorine and the K-2106 kit for bromine. The bromine kit does not include the test for cyanuric acid since this is not needed in bromine systems. Since you already have the K-2006 adding the FAS-DPD bromine test will give you everything you need to test your bromine spa.

  7. I just got my new HS Soveriegn set up last Sat. Everything is working good I think.

    One question though, I am using a half teaspoon of dichlor after every soak and i use a non chlorine shock once a week, MPS i think, along with the ozone for my cleaning program

    I have tested my water everyday (just to get the hang of things) and my test strips always show Zero free chlorine. Is this normal or is it something i should be worried about? I know the chlorine burns off pretty quickly but I would think that I would show soemthing for this reading.

    I am a total newbie so please go easy on me. Thanks

    Jeff

    Ditch the strips and get a drop based kit for testing. Strips just don't have the precision you need for water balancing! (I would recommend the Taylor K-2006 for accuracy and ease of use.)

    It is normal for the chlorine to burn off in sunlight until some cyanruic acid (stabilzier) builds up from continued dichlor use. You didn't say how many gallons your spa was so I cant tell you how high 1 teaspoon of dichlor will raise the FC level but I can tell you that one teaspoon of dichlor will raise the FC about 2 ppm in 250 gal water. The ozone is also destroying your chlorine. It is a fact of life in systems that use both chlorine and ozone. You might need to ajust your chlorine levels to accomodate for this. I would recommend that you keep your FC level at a minimum of 2 ppm in light of recent research on kill times for water borne pahtogens.. The MPS is fine (it can cause your total alkalinity and pH to drop because it is acidic and it will add sulfates to your water) but you can also shock (superchlorinate) with unstabilzied chlorine. (Dichlor is stabilized chlorine, it contains cyanuric acid to help prevent the chlorine from burning off in sunlight). The easiest to use in a spa is plain, unscented laundry bleach (It is sodium hypochlorite, same as liquid chlorine sold at pool stores, just a lower strength usually, but not always.) For regular strength (5.25%) bleach you would use 1 cup for each 250 gallons, for ultra strength (6%) you would use 3/4 cup. If you decide to use pool liquid chlorine it is usually 12.5% (sometimes it is 10% and sometimes 6%--same as ultra bleach!) so you would use about 1/4 to 3/8 cup of the 12.5% .

    While you are at it don't waste your money on alkalinity increaser. This particular chemcial can be found at your grocery store under the name of baking soda!

    BTW, enjoy the new spa! It's not rocket science and you will soon get the hang of it!

  8. it really depends on where you live. and what yout total desolved solids are. calcium (if in good balance) would not have an effect because it is linked to the pool chemisty. you have heat and your water evaporates out a lot, then you are constatly replacing water, especially inteh summer time, and your TDS does not increace.

    This is not true, some -parts of the country have water with very high TDS! Sometimes so high that water is trucked in. If the pool is topped off with water that has higher TDS then the initial fill water then the TDS will increase with each topoff.

    but if you are in a place where it doesn't rain or the sun doesn'ty evaporate your water

    Only place I can think of that meet these two requirements would be the dark side of the moon.

    out then you do have to change it about 10 years or so, but it all depends on you TDS level. i think it can go up to 2500 ppm. before it will stop taking shemicals

    I would suggest to learn exactly what TDS is before you try to give someone advice about it. Your previous statement is totally false. A pool with a SWG (salt water generator) that uses a salt level of, say 3200 pppm such as the Goldline units, would have a TDS of higher than 3200 pppm, perhaps much higher and yet many more ionic substances could still dissolve in this water. This is what Total Dissolved Solids means--the amount of ionic substances DISSOLVED in the water (as opposed to non ion susbstances or suspended particles).

    . also if your CYA is high then you would also haev to drain your pool to get that down or youse a chlorien shock that does not have it in there like calcium hypochlorite or liquid chlorine.

    You should NEVER shock your pool with stabilized chlorine. It will cause a very fast rise in CYA! How high your CYA is will determine just how high you need to shock and how high you need to keep your FC for normal sanitation.

    hope this helps.

    pluss your filter sand is changes every 3-5 years so it cann't clog your sand filter.

    Filter sand won't clog your sand filter....calcium desposits and dirt clog it.

    Sorry to sound harsh but there is enough bad advice in this industry from 'professionals' and manufacturers trying to sell products (some of dubious value) so that someone who really has little understanding of pool chemistry but knows a few terms (but not their meanings) should really not try to give advice about things they really don't understand.

  9. What is the BEST test kit for spas? Would most of you agree its the Taylor K2005 test kit? If so, any suggestions on best prices to order the kit online?

    I need a better testing kit than the one I have now!

    Thanks!

    IMHO, if you are using chlorine then the Taylor K-2006, if you are using bromine then the Taylor K-2106. Both these kits use the FAS-DPD test instead of the DPD test. It is more accurate and since it is a titration test (similar to the Total Alkalinity and Calcium Hardness tests) with a distinct color change from pink to colorless there is no problem determining the exact sanitizer level as there is with the colormetric (color matching) DPD test in the K-2005. Also, FAS-DPD test does not have the bleachout at high sanitizer levels problem that the DPD test suffers from! All other tests in the K-2006 are identical to the ones in the K-2005. The K-2106 is made for bromine so it does not include the Cyanuric Acid test, which is not needed nor used in a bromine system but contains the other water tests included in the K-2006 and K-2005. The K-2005 is an excellent test kit but the two kits that Taylor makes that used FSD-DPD are FAR superior!

  10. My pool man tells me the entire water supply should be changed every seven or eight years because it accumulates calcium that will clog the filters. Is this a valid recommendation?

    Water in a pool does not accumulate calcium. The calcium has to be added either by adding calcium chloride to increase calcium hardness if it is too low, by chlorinating ith calcium hypochlorite, by having a lot of calcium in the fill water used in the pool, or by letting your water balance go out of whack so you literally dissolve some of the plaster finsish of the pool (for a plaster pool). If you are chlorinating with calcium hypochlorite there is a simple solution...use sodium hypochlorite or lithium hypochlorite instead! If you fill water is very hard (high in calcium) then draining and refilling isn't going to help much unless you fill from water coming out of a water softener. If you accidently added too much calcium hardness increaser just drain out some of the water and refill. If you let your water chemistry get so out of whack that you are dissolving calcium from the plaster then fire the pool man and get one that knows what he is doing! (Or better yet, learn to take care of the pool yourself!)

    More serious problem (and I am surprised your pool man didn't mention this!) is if you are using trichlor or dichlor exclusively....your CYA (cyanuric acid or stabilzier) will rise to unacceptable levels. This will cause the chlorine to become in ineffective sanitizer and allow algae outbreaks and it has been found by reseach recently done by Arch Chemical (HTH and PoolLife brands of pool products) that high levels of CYA will damage plaster pools! I have seen pools that use cartridge filters (which are not backwashed) go from 0 ppm to above 100 ppm (way too high) in one year or less and pools will sand filters in a few years time!

    BTW, some might blame this on TDS (total dissolved solids) but that is not the case. It is not the total amount of stuff dissolved in the water that matters but WHICH stuff is contributing to that total. For example, a pool with a lot of sodium and chloride ions, while having a high TDS, will not have any adverse effects (or pools with salt water generators would all be in trouble) but if the measured TDS is coming from sulfates from using dry acid and non chlorine shock then you run the risk of plaster damage and if it is coming from high calcium you can develop scale deposits on the pool and in the filter.

  11. what exactly are these products that you can get from the grocer to sanitize your tub.

    Here they are (and they are exactly the same products you get at the pool/spa supply store!

    For sanitation it is liquid chlorine (for those of you using bromine this is your oxidizer or shock) AKA sodium hypochlorite AKA plain, unscented laundry bleach--either regular or ultra strength.

    Total Alkalinity increaser aka sodium bicarbonate aka sodium hydrogen carbonate aka baking soda

    pH increaser aka sodium carbonate aka washing soda ( in the laundry aise) BUT this will also raise your total alkalinity so a better choice for raising pH without having an impact on total alkalinity is:

    Sodiium Tetraborate aka borax (the 20 mule team stuff) which is sold by some pool and spa products companies as a 'water enchancer' for a lot of money. When added to a 30-50 ppm concentration it acts as an algaestat, pH buffer, and helps reduce sanitizer demand (YES, it really works--I use it in my pool and my spa!) It is, IMHO, the best choice for raising pH without sending your other water parameters out of whack!

    If you water is very soft you might need calcium hardness increaser--here is a little secret. Most of it is made by Dow Chemical and repackaged! Dow sells it as Dowflake and in pellet form and it is often available in hardware stores as a road de icer! It is EXACTLY the same stuff sold for much more money in the pool and supply stores! Just calcium chloride! The Dow website had a page that listed this as the product (along with their pellet form of calcium chloride) that is recommeded for pool and spa use!

    You still need to get pH decreaser (dry acid AKA sodium bisulfate) from the supply store or your neighborhood, Home Depot, Walmart, Lowes, Ace Hardware, etc. and if you are using bromine you still need the sodium bromide and possibly bromine tablets if you are doing a 3-step bromine system. If you are using chlorine you might possibly need a small amount of cyanuric acid (stablizer) or you might want to initially chlorinate with dichlor (which contains stabilzier) until a small amount builds up in the water on each refill. This can help prevent the chlorine from burning off in sunlight but too much will prevent the chlorine from being an effective sanitizer! (IMHO, I would NOT let the CYA go above about 20-30 ppm.)

    The only other product you might need is a metal sequesterant if your fill water tests positive for metals or if your have very hard water.

    You DO NOT NEED algaecides, defoamers, clarifiers, enzymes, or phospahte removers if you are maintaining your water. These products can cover up problems for a while but do not cure them so if you have a regular need for them then you are not properly caring for your water.

    Finally there is one product that is an absolute MUST HAVE: A good drop based test kit used weekly. Strips just don't have the precision needed for making water balance adjustments (but are fine for a quick check on a daily basis to see if you need to drag out the test kit). When I say a good drop based kit I mean a kit such as the Taylor K-2006 for chlorine systems and a K-2106 for bromine systems. Many people seem to think that about $60 is too much to spend on a test kit but when you consider the thousands of dollars your spa cost it really isn't and a good kit will make your testing easy and your water care even easier. If you don't believe me just do one chlorine or bromine test with the FAS-DPD test included in the kits above and see if it isn't easier than the standard DPD tests included in most other kits (if you are testing chlorine or bromine with OTO then you have a cheapie kit!) Also you will find that you can read the results and there is no gussing what color on the comparator or test strip it really is!

  12. what are you keeping your bromine levels at? It could be white water mold...does it break up easily when you touch it? Post a complete set of test results(from a drop based kit and NOT test strips) and that might give a clue as to what is happening. (bromine, pH, TA Calcium harness). Also, are you doing a two step bromine (sodium bromide and oxidizer) or a 3 step bromine (sodium bromide, oxidizer, and tablets in floater)? Also, what are you using for your oxidizer, chlorine or MPS? Many people think that just putting bromine tablets in a floater is doing bromine properly, it isn't! Water changes on a regular basis are very important with bromine systems, especially when tablets are used, because of the depletion of the bromide reserve in the water and the stabilization effects of the methylhydantion in the tabs. This can lead to udersantized water even if bromine levels are testing properly, similar to what happens in an overstabilized chlorine pool.

    If you are oxiziding (shocking) every 2 weeks it is entirely possible that your bromine levels are dropping too low in that period and allowing stuff to grow in the tub or the plumbing. Changing the water more often (every 3-4 months) , adding sodium bromide on each refill to establish your bromide reserve in the water, and oxidizing weekly might help eliminate the problem. If it is white water mold then draining the tub, refilling and sanitizing with chlorine at about 20-30 ppm (remember to clean the cover, pillow, etc.) and to run the circulation system to sanitize the plumbing) then draining and refilling and going back to the bromine should pretty much take care of it.

  13. If you are going to maintain your CYA at 60 ppm then keep your FC at 5-10 ppm for normal chlorination and shock to at least 20 ppm ppm when you need to kill algae or burn off combined chlorine. This should give you enough active free chlorine in the water for the amount of stabilzier present. If you want to run at more normal levels of 3-6 ppm and shocking to 15 ppm then get the CYA below 50 ppm.

  14. I have a ten year old 18' above ground pool. Never had a problem managing the water until this year. It's been a hot summer so I have been shocking the pool at least one time per week. Recently however, whenever I use the shock the liner turns an almost rusty color. I poured in 5 gallons of liquid shock this morning as I had been on vacation for over a week. The walls immediately turned a rusty color. The walls do not feel slimy so I am thinking that I have a build up of minerals probably iron. Am I correct in this assumption?

    Rob

    Sounds like iron. To see if it is take an ordinary viamin C tablet and hold it on a stained area. If the stain disappears almost immediately it's iron. To get rid of the iron staining use ascorbic acid powder (vitamin C). (NOTE: if the staining is NOT iron this procedure may or MAY NOT work, if the vitamin C tablet removed the stain it WILL work) You can buy it under brand names like Natural Chemistry's Stain Free or you can search on the internet for a supplier of ascorbic acid powder (much less expensive). Here is the procedure:

    1) drop your free chlorine to below 2 ppm (don't add any chlorine for a few days to a week to achieve this or use a chlorine neutailizer (sodium thiosulfate). Then lower the pH to about 7.4 if it is higher than that.

    2) I estimate your pool to be between 8000 and 10000 gal if it is an 18' round with 4-5 foot depth so I would add 1 lb of ascorbic acid. Just sprinkte it into the water all around the pool. Run pump for 24-48 hours. All the staining (or most of it at any rate) should be gone.

    3) add a double dose of metal sequesterant. (for your pool this would usually be between 24-32 oz.) I personally have had good luch with Proteam's Metal Magic and Jack's Magic Pink Stuff (for iron).

    4) Now here is the tricky part, if you do not want the stains to reappear you have to raise your chlorine levels slowly over a period of days (and the ascorbic acid creates a huge chlorine demand so any chlorine you put in gets used up burning off the ascorbic acid.) I would use liquid chlorine and add enough each evening to raise the free chlorine 2 ppm. (for your pool that would be about a pint assuming 12.5% liquid chlorine, if you prefer to use laundry bleach you can use 1 qt of 6% ultra bleach or 1 qt and 1 cup of 5.25% regular bleach).

    Check your chlorine levels each morning. At first you will find that the chlornine is not holding and is gone each day but after a few days to a week the chlorine will start to hold and will rise to normal levels (usually 3-5 ppm). Once the chlorine is holding and has reached normal levels rebalance the TA and pH if needed and you can start swimming again.

    5) remember to add a maintenance dose ( usually just a few ounces) of sequesteran every two weeks to every month and keep tabs on your pH and don't let it rise above 7.6 or you will create conditons for the stains to return.

  15. If you want to really learn about hot tubs and chemistry, you have to get away from the spa industry and read and study real information. So, much is tainted by money and the need to sell something.

    Jim,

    I have to agree 1000% with this statement! If you look at the info I post on water chemistry, for example, much of it goes against 'standard' pool and spa advice and dogma but is based on solid chemistry. (And I find it interesting that the industry is beginning to change some of their dogma and update it as customers become more saavy and technically minded!)

  16. Artie,

    Just an FYI, Leisure Time, Robarb, Rendezvous (GLB), Applied Biochemists, and Ultima pool products are all manufactured by Advantis Technoligies in GA. If you compare the Leisure Time, Robarb, and GLB/Rendezvous spa product lines you will see quite a bit of duplication of basically identical products.

  17. Thank you, Waterbear, for explaining "how" bigunide works. VERY informative! So, since the bacteria develops an immunity, that is why it's essential to change the tub water (AND thoroughly clean the tub walls before refilling) every three months. Does it make sense, then, come warm weather, to drain the tub, wash down the walls and somehow "flush" out the innards (fill up the tub and drain it, again) before the final fill?

    I have to admit that when I've emptied the tub and refilled it, I've been "hasty" in cleaning the tub walls. Seems that, a really thorough scrubbing is in order, yes?

    OPOOL. You are saying that it is okay to use Waterline Control even if the tub has an ozonator?

    jencorr. I will try out one of those scumbug sponge thingies. And that is interesting about the relevance of sanitizer level to scum production. I did not know that.

    The less biguanide in the water the less it will break down bacteria and the less it can react with any residual chlorine in the water, hence the less goo formation. BTW, scumbugs work GREAT! (and work with bromine and chlorine too)

  18. A couple of points I would like to make to the three previous posters---

    First to SmilinBare--Why don't we just agree to disagree and start fresh here and now. Biguanide IS a viable sanitizer but it does have more downsides than the other EPA approved ones currently available. I hope you have contunued good luck with it. One caution I will give you that I don't think has been mentioned but I was reminded of when you said you wanted your spa to last a long time. Be on the alert for discoloration or clouding of plastic parts in your tub. Biguanide destroys some of the plastic materials used in hot tubs, notably the lens covers on some spa lights. BTW, I have never implied that you might be a Baqua rep---just to set the record straight!

    Jim the Jim--the 'slime' is usually the end product of biguanide sanitation. Biguaide causes the cell walls of bacteria to explode and the peroxide oxidizer is not strong enough to 'burn them up' totally so this collects on the wall and in the filter as 'goo'. In addition, if there is chlorine in the fill water this will start to oxidize the biguanide and add to the goo.

    Artie--The Leisure Time biguanide system (Leisure Time Free) is really no different than either BaquaSpa or SoftSoak or any of the other brands of biguanide based sanitizers. The Biguanide or PMBH is your sanitizer, the peroxide is simply the oxidizer to help 'burn off' the organics that collect in the water from the sanitation process and from normal tub use. They are have the exact same compatability issues with certain spa chemicals because this is an issue with the bigainide itself. It is not really the brand that matters. it is the chemical! On the Leisure Time website it says that the Free system is only compatible with the Leisure Time Simple Spa products, which are used with all Leisure Time sanitizes. This just means that they have not included any products in this line that are incompatible with biguanide. There are no spa care products that I can think of that are incompatible either chlorine or bromine except for bigianide! (And it is not normal practice to mix different SANITIZERS together at the same time, anyway--except maybe chlorine and bromine in a bromine system)

  19. I don't recall "blasting" anyone, Waterbear, simply because it's not considerate. Roll your eyes if you want to :rolleyes: when I say that I try to adhere to The Golden Rule. Besides, I'm a firm believer in "What goes around comes around". Here on The Spa Forum I've tried to keep my posts to the point and without emotion as the antics of some of the others are nauseating to me.

    I LIKE BaquaSpa! Before my wife and I discovered the stuff, we were dead set against getting a hot tub because we just don't like chlorine.

    I read your post about white water mold and have filed it away in my hot tub notes for future reference though I hope I never need it. You can rest assured that when and if I experience problems with my hot tub water chemistry, I'll be sure to post about them here. After all, this website is a great resource, IMHO.

    Perhaps 'blasted' is not the right word but I refer you to the thread you started on Jan 2, 2006 entitled "Baqua?" in which you attemted to refute every statement that I made based on only the experiences with your own spa, especially the cost differences and you even admitted that you had no experience with other sanitizer systems. I can also dig up some of you other posts in some other threads if you memory needs more of a refresher.

  20. Althought 5 ppm of chlorine is not an issue it may cause irritation to the skin and bother the eyes. Another effect high chlorine levels may have is on the bathing suit. It works as a catalyst and may cause your bathing suit to break down much faster than it would normall. It is recommended to to wait a few days to have the cholorine levels come down before using your pool. I recommened the 2-3ppm is a good level

    Best,

    Opool (http://opool.com)

    5 ppm free chlorine is NOT high if you have a normal (30-50 ppm) level of CYA. In fact, at 30 to 50 ppm CYA you SHOULD be running your free chlorine at 3-6 ppm for proper sanitation and algae conrtrol and should be shocking to a minimum of 12 ppm! 2-3 ppm is ok if there is NO CYA in the water such as might be found in an indoor pool or a pool using an ORP controller and a peristaltic pump for dosing liquid chlorine (sodium hypochlorite).

  21. Waterbear, I would appreciate your insight into my "future." As I stated above, I've been using BaquaSpa since August when I got my new Sundance Capri with ozonator. I have been very happy with it since the water is always sparkling and pleasant, and only a small amount of goo appears in the filter well. I don't consider the cost prohibitive. Now, my tub is indoors, inside of a sunroom of total glass. When we use the tub, which is nearly everyday (only my wife and I), we shower thoroughly and go without clothing. We have a powerful exhaust fan, ceiling fans and we open windows. The water parameters have always been stable, I suspect in part, because we are diligent about keeping it free of contaminents as much as possible. So far, so good. However, you and others have suggested that BaquaSpa good times will probably not last forever. My wife is VERY sensitive to chemicals (I know that biguanide and all the other stuff with BaquaSpa are chemicals too), and she didn't even want to try Chlorine (I know...if done correctly, no smell and very effective). If and when we start running into water problems, which of the other two methods, Chroine or Bromine, do you suggest? I understand that having it indoors might be a factor, having an ozonator might be a factor, and having a hypersensitive wife might be a factor. As of now, I just test with the strips, and put stuff in once a week. I certainly don't want to get into adding stuff everyday before or after use, since many times I'm at work and my wife goes in alone. Thanks in advance for any thoughts (and don't dis BaquaSpa or I'll cry). David

    My advice is that if it is working for you now use it and if and when you start having problem then explore other solutions. Chlorine would be my first choice (I would NOT use dichlor in an indoor spa but then again your spa might get enough sunlight to warrent a little bit when your first fill) if your wife is sensitive to chemicals since, IMHO, it is milder than bromine and less likely to cause an allergic reaction. In the meantime, enjoy the spa and worry about problems when they appear!

  22. We own the infamous "Easy Set" pool. We noticed a green tinge to the water so got the shock treatment, added a bit extra chlorine to the filter and let it run the night.

    Well,now the chlorine level is pretty high,..5.0. Will that make all our skin fall off? Will we wither and get sucked into the flter w/ the rest of the crap?

    actually 5 ppm is not high at all. In fact, many state health departments allow outdoor commercial pools to be open whenever the free chlorine is below 10 ppm. The recommendations for pools was changed in, I believe, 2005 in light of recent research on kill times for water borne pathogens and now it is recommended that your free chlorine levels never drop below 2 ppm. The old 1-3 ppm was fine for an indoor pool with NO CYA (stabilizer) in the water but as soon as you introduce CYA or use a stabilized form of chlorine (trichlor or dichlor) it becomes necessary to run your free chlorine at higher levels to achieve the same level of sanitation. In fact, if your CYA levels are at around 100 ppm or higher (not uncommon in pool that use pucks and have cartridge filters) you would need to run your free chlorine at 8-15 ppm just to achieve normal sanitation and would need to shock to 25-30 ppm to destroy chloramines and kill algae!

    5 ppm is fine!

  23. Bigunide works by causing the bacteria cells to explode and that is what causes the brown goo. Bacteria can also develop an immunity to it much the same way they beocme immune to antibiotics. In a new setup the bacteria are killed very quickly. As they start to become immune they can reproduce more before they are killed, this can cause cloudy water and more goo. The purpuse of the peroxide is to burn up the orgainics from the dead bacteria but it reaches a point where it can't keep up.

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