The constant use of small 1" , large 3" jumbo chlorine tabs and granular chlorine. they all have cyanurics acid in the compound mix. Best to switch to liquid for a while ( a month of so). The high levels of cyanurics will eventually drop as water evaporates and you add fill water. High levels of cyanuric acid or conditioner would be considered to be in excess of 100 ppm. You could also do a partial drain of the pool and refill to reduce the CYA faster.
In the future you might consider alternating between liquid 12% chlorine and tabs. Note: 1" tabs dissolve faster. HTH granular and tabs I believe do not contain conditioner but then it is a lesser grade of chlorine - see percentage values on label.
Cyanuric acid is the stabilizing agent for chlorine. Low levels will cause you chlorine level to drop very quickly. Be carefull when raising the Cyanuric acid level because there is no way to lower it other than removing some of the water and then refilling the pool.
If you have added cyanuric acid, it should show up in a test. The acid will stay in the pool permanently until it is drained. Take a sample of water to a retail pool store and request that they test for it. Advise them how much acid you have put in the water, and they should be able to advise you further on the issue.
Make sure your test strips are good, and have your water tested at your local pool store to confirm your readings.
Yes, you need cyanuric acid in a salt water pool. It will preserve your chlorine.
uric acid, mammals do it in the form of urea, this process is to ensure that little water is lost
Uric Acid is not water soluble due to it's toxic and acidic base.
Birds, insects and reptiles conserve water by excreting uric acid. This is because the solubility of uric acid in water is poor thus can conserve water easily.
Yes, Cyanuric acid is less toxic than table salt. The median lethal dose (LD50) for table salt is 3,000 mg/kg of body weight while for Cyanuric acid it is 7700 mg/kg of body weight which means it is classified as 'essentially non toxic".
Coconut is low in purines and will therefore not have much effect on the production of uric acid in the body.
No, vinegar has no uric acid in it. Vinegar is a water solution of acetic acid and sometimes coloring matter and/or flavors depending on type and processing.
Drink more water.
Water, salt, uric acid.
it is dissolved in water
urea,uric acid,water
Chickens do not urinate, water is utilized differently and uric acid is separated differently from mammals. Uric acid is expelled via the intestines with fecal matter. The white part of the chickens droppings is uric acid.
It is a test for uric acid. High Uric acid in he blood can lead to the formation of uric acid crystals which are responsible for the pain.