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TDS or Total Dissolved Solids is a measure of the total solids in the water. Solids in the water come from calcium, carbonates, dissolved organic and inorganic materials, salts from chlorine residue, swimmer waste, soluble hair and body lotion or anything placed in the spa that can be dissolved. It can be measured by strips, or a device designed to measure the electrical resistance of the water (less resistance, more solids).
I hate to disagree with you but a TDS only measures conductivity in the water.
Vermonter,Since you have access to more sophisticated test instruments than a typical person might have, I understand how you can get a TDS accurately.
I agree that some criteria can be used but it seems that "electronically measuring" a tub for TDS is not the way, based on my limited research.
So for $20 - $100 you can get a rough/close idea, and for $10,000 you can get it exact?I think close is good enough for me
The CHEAP and QUICK way:Assume you have NICE and CLEAR water when the tub is OFF, everything is "balanced" with levels where they are supposed to be.When you turn the tub ON (during the day) if you can't see the bottom, you have high TDS and it's probably time to change water.Just my OPINION...Drewski
This sounds like my water.Any solution other than changing the water? Will shocking the water help?
Vermonter,Since you have access to more sophisticated test instruments than a typical person might have, I understand how you can get a TDS accurately.But if I bought a $20 or $100 TDS tester, it would only measure conductivity and convert it to TDS. If my pool, spa or any other body of water was contaminated by stuff that wasn't electically charged by nature - a non lab (or maybe even a lab) quality TDS meter won't cut it. The organic load of the water is totally being missed by it.I agree that some criteria can be used but it seems that "electronically measuring" a tub for TDS is not the way, based on my limited research.