Pool water testing Melbourne

On-site pool water testing and measured chemical balancing

Litra PoolCare tests your pool water beside the pool, reviews the readings against the equipment setup, surface type, sanitizer system and recent use, then balances the water with measured dosing.

  • Digital photometer testing for chlorine, pH, alkalinity, calcium, stabiliser and salt/TDS.
  • Practical balancing for salt, chlorine and mineral pools around Melbourne.
  • Clear service notes after the visit: readings, chemicals used and what to watch next.
Litra PoolCare technician testing pool water beside a residential swimming pool
On-site testing before chemical dosing
Testing at the pool, not blind dosing We read the water first, then decide whether the issue is sanitation, pH drift, stabiliser imbalance, salt output, filtration or circulation.
Readings first No chemical correction without checking the water condition.
System context Pool size, chlorinator, filter, cover use and season all matter.

Why measured pool water testing works better

Good pool care is not just a reading on a strip. It is a measured process: test, interpret, dose, circulate and check the result against how the pool is actually used.

Measured readings Photometer-based checks help reduce guesswork and make chemical corrections easier to explain.
Balanced as a system Chlorine, pH, alkalinity, calcium, stabiliser, salt and temperature are interpreted together.
Practical dosing Chemicals are added according to the reading, pool volume, current condition and target movement.
Clear service notes You get a simple record of what was tested, what was added and what needs attention next.

What our pool water testing service covers

The service is built for domestic salt, chlorine and mineral pools around Melbourne. It helps diagnose cloudy water, pH drift, low chlorine, scale marks, algae pressure, staining risk and water that keeps going out of balance.

Full chemistry panel

Free and total chlorine, pH, total alkalinity, calcium hardness, cyanuric acid, salt/TDS and temperature where needed.

Scale and corrosion risk check

We look at pH, alkalinity, calcium, temperature and dissolved solids together, not as isolated numbers.

Salt and chlorinator support

For salt pools, we compare salt readings with the chlorinator’s operating range and check if output, runtime or cell scale may be affecting FC.

Problem diagnosis

Cloudiness, algae rebound, staining, waterline scale and strong chlorine smell are matched to test results before treatment is chosen.

Target bands we normally work toward

These are practical domestic pool targets. We adjust them for the pool finish, cover use, heater or heat pump, salt chlorinator type, bather load, sunlight and current water temperature.

Free Chlorine (FC) Usually 1–3 ppm as a minimum operating concept, with higher practical targets often needed in outdoor stabilised pools, heavy summer use or high bather load.
pH Usually 7.2–7.6 for comfort, sanitizer efficiency and equipment protection. If pH keeps rising, we look at alkalinity, aeration and dosing habits.
Total Alkalinity (TA) Commonly around 80–120 ppm, adjusted to the pool finish, sanitizer system and how quickly pH drifts between visits.
Calcium Hardness (CH) Often around 200–350 ppm for many domestic pools, with adjustments for plaster, tiled surfaces, vinyl/fibreglass and heater protection.
Cyanuric Acid (CYA) Outdoor chlorine pools commonly need stabiliser, but too much CYA slows active chlorine. FC targets must be interpreted together with CYA.
Salt / TDS Salt is kept within the chlorinator manufacturer’s range. Low salt, high salt, scale on the cell or short runtime can all reduce chlorine stability.
Why this matters: clear water can still be under-sanitised if FC is too low for the stabiliser level. We read the numbers as a system, not as separate “green or red” results.

Our testing and balancing workflow

A measured process reduces guesswork and helps prevent the boom-bust cycle of zero chlorine, heavy shock, temporary clarity and repeat cloudiness.

Sample correctly Circulate the pool, take a representative sample away from return jets and avoid dead-zone readings.
Run the test panel Check FC/TC, pH, TA, CH, CYA, salt/TDS and temperature where relevant.
Interpret the pattern Identify whether the issue is sanitation, pH drift, stabiliser imbalance, scale risk, filtration or circulation.
Dose in stages Add only what is needed, circulate, re-test where required and avoid oversized corrections.
Check equipment context Review chlorinator output, pump runtime, filter condition, cover use and visible water movement.
Record clear notes Provide readings, chemicals used, treatment rationale and simple between-visit actions.

Fast troubleshooting: readings, likely causes and actions

This table shows how common pool water symptoms are interpreted. The exact treatment depends on test results, pool size, equipment and recent events such as storms, parties or top-ups.

Reading or symptom Likely cause What we do first
Low FC with low CYA Sunlight is burning off chlorine faster than the pool can hold it. Restore FC, adjust stabiliser carefully, then review runtime or dosing frequency.
Normal FC reading but cloudy water Fine debris, dead algae, poor filtration, weak circulation or recent chemical demand. Check filter condition, brush, circulate, clarify only when suitable for the filter type.
pH above target with high alkalinity High buffering, aeration, salt cell operation or repeated over-correction. Lower pH in stages and reduce alkalinity gradually rather than making one large correction.
Waterline scale or heater scale risk High pH, high calcium hardness and positive saturation tendency. Bring pH under control, review calcium level and protect heater or heat pump components.
Green tint or stains with chlorine present Possible metals, staining reaction or algae beginning under the surface of clear water. Test and observe before aggressive shock; manage pH and choose the correct treatment path.
Algae rebound after storms Dilution, debris, low residual chlorine, phosphate load or short circulation time. Restore FC, remove debris, clean baskets/filter and re-check CYA after mixing.
Reading or symptomLow FC with low CYA
Likely causeSunlight is burning off chlorine faster than the pool can hold it.
What we do firstRestore FC, adjust stabiliser carefully, then review runtime or dosing frequency.
Reading or symptomNormal FC reading but cloudy water
Likely causeFine debris, dead algae, poor filtration, weak circulation or recent chemical demand.
What we do firstCheck filter condition, brush, circulate, clarify only when suitable for the filter type.
Reading or symptompH above target with high alkalinity
Likely causeHigh buffering, aeration, salt cell operation or repeated over-correction.
What we do firstLower pH in stages and reduce alkalinity gradually rather than making one large correction.
Reading or symptomWaterline scale or heater scale risk
Likely causeHigh pH, high calcium hardness and positive saturation tendency.
What we do firstBring pH under control, review calcium level and protect heater or heat pump components.
Reading or symptomGreen tint or stains with chlorine present
Likely causePossible metals, staining reaction or algae beginning under the surface of clear water.
What we do firstTest and observe before aggressive shock; manage pH and choose the correct treatment path.
Reading or symptomAlgae rebound after storms
Likely causeDilution, debris, low residual chlorine, phosphate load or short circulation time.
What we do firstRestore FC, remove debris, clean baskets/filter and re-check CYA after mixing.

Seasonal water balancing for Melbourne pools

  • Summer: higher UV, heat and bather load usually mean higher chlorine demand, closer pH control and more attention to stabiliser.
  • Storm periods: rain, overflow and wind-blown debris can dilute chlorine and CYA while increasing organic load.
  • Winter: demand may drop, but low circulation, cover use and hidden pH drift can still create algae, scale or biofilm problems.

Covered pools need different thinking

A pool cover can reduce UV chlorine loss and heat loss, but it can also change aeration, organic build-up and oxidation needs. We adjust runtime, chlorine target and shock timing around how the cover is actually used.

Related pool care services

Water balance often connects with filtration, green pool recovery, equipment condition and routine maintenance. These related pages help users choose the right next step instead of landing on a dead end.

Frequently asked questions

How often should pool water be tested?

Weekly testing is sensible in summer, during heavy use or after storms. In cooler months, many domestic pools can be checked less often, but chlorine, pH and circulation should still be monitored so problems do not build quietly.

Why does my pool keep going cloudy even when chlorine is present?

Cloudiness can come from fine debris, dead algae, filter overload, poor circulation, high pH, calcium scale tendency or chlorine demand that is higher than the current FC target. We test first, then match the treatment to the cause.

Do salt pools still need water balancing?

Yes. A salt chlorinator produces chlorine, but it does not automatically keep pH, alkalinity, calcium, stabiliser and salt in the correct relationship. Salt pools often need pH control, cell inspection and runtime/output adjustment.

Can balancing protect heaters, heat pumps and pool surfaces?

Balanced water reduces the risk of scale, corrosion and surface damage. We look at pH, alkalinity, calcium, temperature and dissolved solids together, especially when a heater, heat pump, salt cell or plaster surface is present.

Do you provide the chemicals?

Yes. Litra PoolCare can supply the required chemicals and itemise what was used. The aim is measured correction, not unnecessary dosing.

Need a clear reading before adding more chemicals?

Book professional pool water testing and balancing. We check the numbers, explain what they mean and dose only what the pool needs.

Service Area Map: South-East Melbourne, Nearby Bayside Suburbs & Selected Peninsula Areas

Tap a suburb chip to focus the map. We mainly service Carrum Downs, Frankston, Seaford, Chelsea, Patterson Lakes and nearby south-east suburbs, with selected Mornington Peninsula coverage.

Map shows the main service radius around Carrum Downs. Final visit availability still depends on suburb, access, and current workload.
Map could not load. Service areas include Carrum Downs, Frankston, Seaford, Chelsea, Patterson Lakes, Langwarrin, Skye, Edithvale, Aspendale, Mordialloc and nearby south-east suburbs.
Cleaning Maintenance Skimmer Filtration Chlorine Algae Pump Backwash Vacuum pH Level Sanitizer Brush Debris Water Test
Cleaning Maintenance Skimmer Filtration Chlorine Algae Pump Backwash Vacuum pH Level Sanitizer Brush Debris Water Test
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