We are a small RTE fresh-cut fruit and veg operation and use PAA in our product prewash as well as a post cutting rinse. We use it in appropriate PPMs per guidance from our chemical company and other accepted scientific sources on a number of different commodities, mostly between the range of 40 - 80 ppm,.
We test our wash and rinse water hourly and have resorted to only doing titration tests due to having problems with our test strips. They read consistently higher than the titration results. We have tried multiple brands and have set up tests using PAA dilution ratios as a control and then compare the results to titration results.
I realize test strips are an approximation seeing that you are relying upon someone to interpret a color chart, but we are consistently getting reading that are nowhere close to the titration results. One brand reads approx 30 ppm higher, another 60 ppm higher, etc.. We see consistency within brands but no consistency between brands.
It is frustrating as we are basing everything else we do off of scientific data and test results but then are experiencing this uncertainty with the test strips. Our chemical supplier has said that most of his customers just do a test to make sure that the PAA is present in some capacity, but that is hard to imagine.
Two questions. One, is doing hourly titration tests an overkill if we don't see much of a PPM change unless running a few certain commodities. Two, has anyone ran into this sort of thing with the PAA test strips before.