Product on sale

Taylor 3-Way Test Kit – K-1001 Discount

$6.84

28 people are viewing this right now
9 products sold in last 14 hours
Selling fast! Over 10 people have this in their carts
  • Check Mark Estimated Delivery : Up to 4 business days
  • Check Mark Free Shipping & Returns : On all orders over $200
  • Visa Card
  • MasterCard
  • American Express
  • Discover Card
  • PayPal
  • Apple Pay
Guaranteed Safe And Secure Checkout

The Taylor K-1001 test kit tests for free chlorine, bromine and pH.

Test Kit Includes:

  • .75 oz DPD Reagent #1 (R-0001-A)
  • .75 oz DPD Reagent #2 (R-0002-A)
  • Residential Series Comparator (9782)
  • .75 oz pH Indicator Solution (Phenol Red) (R-0014-A)
  • Instructions
    • REAGENT SHELF LIFE

      All reagents have a shelf life, whether they are liquids, powders, crystals, tablets, or test-strip pads. If kept dry, powders and crystals are very stable; acids are also long lived. Date of manufacture is not the controlling factor when it comes to shelf life—storage conditions are more important. As with all perishables, reagents are sensitive to environmental influences and will last longer under controlled conditions.

      To this end, we recommend:

      • Storing reagents at a consistent temperature in the range if 36°–85°F (2°–29°C); extreme temperature fluctuation, say from a refrigerator to a hot car trunk, causes reagents to deteriorate.
      • Keeping them out of prolonged direct sunlight. (Note: their brown plastic bottles help protect very light-sensitive reagents.)
      • Segregating reagents from containers of treatment chemicals.
      • Replacing caps immediately and tightening them carefully so that exposure to air and humidity is limited.
      • Avoiding switching bottle caps, placing bottle caps on soiled surfaces, repouring reagents into contaminated containers, or touching test strip pads.
        • Taylor formulates its reagents to remain effective for at least one year, with only very few exceptions (molybdenum indicator in liquid form is one; after four months old it should be tested against a standard periodically). As a general precaution, replace all reagents more than one year old, or at the beginning of a new testing season.

Title

Default Title