Welcome to our forum.
Personally I have learned a lot from chem geek on a different forum and he always is "happy" to answer a question - thanks! One of the things I learned from him is that dichlor = bad as is being portrayed in this thread is not entirely accurate. Also, he was the one that I learned from that the hot tub itch bacteria has to be introduced into the water and it just doesn't grow.
I do believe that Chem geek and Vermonter have had a conversation at one point but I don't know if that's true.
I always feel so warm and fuzzy when somebody comes on and says that a dealer will recommend a chem regimen which makes him the most money. Thank-you Nitro. Actually, Baqua fills that bill, but I no longer recommend it. I have had more problems with that system and I simply do not mention it when people ask what I like the best. I want the tub ownership experience to be as easy as possible, and the Dichlor does it.
I must once again state that I have all the options available and I have found that Dichlor works the best in the thousands of tubs I have contact with.
There seem to be a couple of missing links, as it were, in your thinking which might well be pointed out here. For one, I like ozone systems and N2. In some tubs there is no facility for an extended contact time, so there are little or no benefits to ozone. In those tubs, the use of Dichlor alone may build up CYA. The solution is to change the water every two or three months instead of trying to go four months.
In our tubs - good filtration and ozone standard - the use of Dichlor is minimal. They are tossing in teaspoons at a time, and still getting a reading when they go to use the tub next time. That is not going to bring up CYA in any kind of hurry. In fact, most of our customers soak chlorine free by using MPS after each soak, and backing that up with a Dichlor shock once a month or when they have a crowd in the tub. And I will steal your thunder on this front: MPS builds TDS in the water. Yup. So does bleach, BTW, but regular water changes handle this 'problem' with ease.
I have simplified the system because it works, and works well. I would be glad to sell pool chlorine at low prices for my customers who want it, but so far none have wanted it. Pool chlorine is analogous to laundry bleach but is available for less and can be sold in bulk - ie: bring in your empties to exchange for full bottles. But keeping bottles of bleach around the house turns off most of my customers - even the ones who have tried laundry bleach come back to Dichlor after awhile.
I don't know how you can make the argument that handling liquid bleach is easier than Dichlor[/b]
Nor can I understand how you can not mention that Sodium Hypo (and Cal Hypo) has a pH of close to 13!! That is the 'dirty little secret' of bleach users[/b][/color]
[glow]Anybody that sells their customers "Alk Up" at a higher price than regular Baking Soda is not someone I would trust giving me advice on maintaining my water.[/glow]I have to see it for more than a box of Baking soda since the chemical companies charge us more. Exspensive plastic bottles........We really are not marking up 500%. Plus, if we do not make a little on our chemical sales we need to charge more for the tubs, service, accessories ect. Aftermarket customers are key to keeping prices lower IMO.Its not a trust thing....Its a buisness. Does the gas station say..."Hey, don't buy diesel from us, go to McDonalds and use they fry grease..."
Nitro one question I have is who exactly are you pitching all this info at? The dealers here or the consumers? Either way your not hitting huge masses of people, just the ones that frequent here from time to time and the dealers that are here. If you really want to spew all this info to people that may be looking create a blog or your own spa care website. Not slamming you or trying to be mean but I am not sure who all this is for? And as I have said, I think it is great information for those that want to learn every possible way to keep a spa clean.
Which costs less PH UP or running the electric for the jets to be on, plus adding the air which cools the water and adds more airborn debris into the water, not to count the time it takes.
I can not help what our chemical companies charge us and you missed the point on the diesel......I am not going to say "Hello, how are you....why don't you go to your local grocery to get help with all your spa needs" If they ask if Alk up and baking soda are the same, I will be honest with them, but I am not going to turn away buisness...do you or whatever company you work for?
And you said it....in your tub....you have a high TA, many do not. Around here we see low TA and High PH often. Maybe all that Hillbilly home brew we drink
I understand some of your chemical things, i was talking with Chem Geek before you even did your neighbors tub, may not agree with it all, respect you posting it, as long as the consumer understands what it involves (many customers come into the store that dump just bleach in their tubs because they read it online, or read part of it because the rest seemed mute to them and wonder why their tub is falling apart) BUT I lose my respect when you degrade the dealers, CPO's, APSP, NSPF ect. Doing this as a larger picture, hundreds of thousands of spas and pools give these people a little credibility.
Nitro....do bleach tablets exist?.....I was thinking maybe it would be nice if you could throw bleach tablets in a float?
To be honest, I'd rather this thread turn into a discussion about ideas and solutions, rather than attacks.
Great idea! Then maybe you shouldn't start threads called [glow]"dirty little secrets about dichlor" [/glow] or make ridiculous statements such as the one the other day saying if you use dichlor you need to drain every month or two, or make statements like you made earlier today where you said to someone "I wish all dealers/retails were like you. Unfortunately they're not. [glow]My problem is with them[/glow], not you. " My problem is you're not only a self promoter but you do so by knocking what others are saying at the same time as a way of validating your opinion.
You obviously know your chemistry but your self titled (should have been a clue) bible is not the be-all/end-all you think it is. The funny thing is that I know MANY fellow spa industry people who deal with chems for spa owners and most of us who have a spa at our own homes use dichlor ourselves. If dichlor was only out there to make sales and was the inferior method you seem to say it is why are well all using it. Of yeah, we don't see the light! I guess we just didn't get the Nitro bible soon enough (sarcasm).
If I'm on the road I prefer to eat where the truckers eat and when I sanitize my spa I'll go the way I know many/most spa professionals sanitize theirs. If dichlor was so troublesome I think I'd have seen it in my 10 years of spa expereince (and 10 years is nothing compared to what many others here have).