Low water PH and skin

I just checked my hot tub and found the PH to be VERY low. What will that do to my skin? (I’m adding chemicals to increase the pH, I’m just curious what happens if I don’t.)

Depends what you mean by “low”. Apparently the secretions of the skin surface are slightly acidic on their own, with a pH of around 4-5.5 (neutral is 7.0, by definition):

From here.

Oooh, post number one for me. I’m no longer a virgin. :slight_smile:

You don’t say what the pH is/was, but depending on several factors, you might get chemical burns, or nothing at all will happen. What happens not only depends on the pH, but on how much of the acid is present, and how strong it is. You can tolerate the citric acid in a lime you would eat (pH ~ 2.0), but an equal amount of hydrochloric acid would burn your stomach and esophagus. Organic acids (acetic in vinegar, malic in apples) are weaker than mineral acids (HCl, phosphoric, sulfuric, nitric, hydroflouric). That said, I can also take a quart of water, add a drop of hydrocloric acid to it, and it would be a very dilute solution that wouldn’t hurt my skin. The pH will be very low, but there is so little acid present that my skin would not be damaged.

Vlad/Igor

The spa test doesn’t show any PH level at all, so it must be REALLY low. Don’t know what the number is though.

I don’t have a hot tub, but I do have experience with aquariums and pools, and I would recommend getting a better Ph test.

It should only be like $10 or $15 for a decent test where you put, for example, 1ml test water into a test tube, and add the reagent dropwise, counting until the color changes. This will give you a much more accurate and precise measure before you go dumping mass chemicals into it. You may discover that your spa test kit has gone bad and there was never anything really wrong with the water in the first place.

Barring that, as it’s only a hottub full of water, I would consider draining the whole thing and starting fresh with a supply of water that within your test range.

Thanks for the input. Having considered that the test strips might have gone bad, I went and bought a new set of strips with the same results. After adding chems to raise the PH, both sets of strips showed a change. Draining would not help, because adding a large amount of water from my well is what caused the drop in the first place. I would have to bring the new water to proper PH AND let it warm up for hours and try to get the bromine levels up.

But what does low PH DO? That is what I want to know. Does my skin dry out? Will I get a rash? There must be a reason that there is a recommended PH level.

Water that is too acidic can erode metal parts, seals, pumps, and heaters, and yes it can cause skin irritation which could manifest itself through dryness and rash.

I’m not positive if this applies to bromine, but low Ph also causes chlorine to dissipate more quickly than normal.