Pool Balance Planning
A saturation index reading helps a pool owner see whether water is hungry for calcium or ready to leave scale. The number is not a single chemical test. It combines several readings into one practical balance score. This calculator is useful after fresh testing, seasonal opening, rain dilution, topping up, or salt cell service.
Why The Index Matters
Pool water can look clear while still being aggressive. Low index water may pull minerals from plaster, grout, stone, heaters, and metal parts. High index water may form rough deposits on tile, salt cells, filters, pipes, and heat exchangers. A balanced value protects surfaces and keeps service decisions more consistent.
What This Tool Checks
The form accepts measured pH, total alkalinity, calcium hardness, stabilizer, temperature, salt status, and total dissolved solids. It converts temperature when needed. It adjusts alkalinity for cyanuric acid influence. It then applies factor tables for temperature, calcium, and alkalinity. The result shows the index, condition, subtotal, penalties, target pH, and target alkalinity.
Better Testing Habits
Use a reliable test kit. Rinse sample cells before testing. Take water from elbow depth, away from returns. Record readings at the same time of day when possible. Warm pools, spas, and salt pools can shift quickly, so repeat testing after large chemical changes.
How To Read Results
A value near zero is ideal. A value between negative 0.30 and positive 0.30 is normally treated as balanced. Below negative 0.30, water trends corrosive. Above positive 0.30, water trends scale forming. The recommendation panel suggests which direction to adjust first.
Safe Adjustment Workflow
Change one item at a time when possible. Recalculate before adding more product. Start with pH and alkalinity, because they move the index quickly. Use calcium changes more carefully, because dilution is often the only easy correction after excessive hardness. Always follow product labels, local codes, and professional guidance for chemical handling.
Practical Use Cases
Service teams can compare pools, explain treatment plans, and store downloadable records. Home users can check seasonal trends, salt pool changes, heater risk, and plaster curing conditions. The example table helps users understand how different readings create balanced, corrosive, or scaling outcomes. It supports clear, repeatable daily maintenance notes.