creamyitalian
06-10-2012, 10:08 PM
Hi I'm new to the forum and I hope someone can help.
This is my second year with my pool. I bought my house last year and was able to get the pool going after A LOT of hard work, but I'm having less luck this year.
First my setup: Pool is above ground approx 10,000 gallons. Filter is Hayward EC40 D.E., pump is Hayward Power-Flo LX 1.5 HP. From what I've read this pump may be too powerful for the filter size but that is what came with the house so...
Anyway, I live in RI and we had a hurricane last August. I decided to close the pool the day before the storm but I did not have the cover secured well enough and a LOT of branches and leaves got in the pool so I am currently scooping a lot of debris out now that I have opened it.
When I first started, the water was black. I put a bunch of shock in, started the filter, and the pool eventually went from black to green. The problem is my filter is clogging very quickly. At the start of the season I took the filter apart, cleaned the "tentacles" and started it up with 4lbs of DE. Within an hour the pressure rose 10psi and the return to the pool was very weak. I "bumped" the filter and that gets me about 20-30 minutes before clogging again (10psi rise, weak return). So I tried the next step which, according to the filter instructions, means bumping the filter again then opening the drain and running the pump to clean out the filter, then putting in new DE again, but even this only buys me 30 minutes. So I have have since opened the filter 2 more times and completely cleaed the filter tentacles but even after doing this I am only getting a few minutes of good filtering before it clogs again.
The pool remains a disgusting green. I try to leave the filter on as long as I can but I just don't have enough time in the day to keep cleaning it every half hour, so it is not possible to filter 8-10 hours a day as needed. It's like a catch 22: in order to clear out the green pool I need to run the filter constantly, but because it is so dirty I cannot run the filter constantly.
As it stands now I have 10-12 gallons of shock in the pool over the past 2 weeks, and my chlorine level is actually OVER the ideal level. pH is normal, alk is ok. My thought is that there is so much algae in the pool that it is cloggin my filter in a bad way. When I open the filter up it is caked with sludge which I think is algae or maybe excess DE. The extreme amounts of chlorine have failed to make a dent in the greeness. At one point a few days ago I had the pool a cloudly teal, but a day later it went back to swamp green.
So what am I to do? Must I devote a few days of sitting by my pool cleaning the filter every 20 minutes? Should I continue to shock or use something else? I just don't see how I can get rid of the algae if I can't keep that filter running strongly for hours at a time. Is it possible something is wrong with the filter beyond it just getting dirty?
Sorry for the length, but please help!
Josh
This is my second year with my pool. I bought my house last year and was able to get the pool going after A LOT of hard work, but I'm having less luck this year.
First my setup: Pool is above ground approx 10,000 gallons. Filter is Hayward EC40 D.E., pump is Hayward Power-Flo LX 1.5 HP. From what I've read this pump may be too powerful for the filter size but that is what came with the house so...
Anyway, I live in RI and we had a hurricane last August. I decided to close the pool the day before the storm but I did not have the cover secured well enough and a LOT of branches and leaves got in the pool so I am currently scooping a lot of debris out now that I have opened it.
When I first started, the water was black. I put a bunch of shock in, started the filter, and the pool eventually went from black to green. The problem is my filter is clogging very quickly. At the start of the season I took the filter apart, cleaned the "tentacles" and started it up with 4lbs of DE. Within an hour the pressure rose 10psi and the return to the pool was very weak. I "bumped" the filter and that gets me about 20-30 minutes before clogging again (10psi rise, weak return). So I tried the next step which, according to the filter instructions, means bumping the filter again then opening the drain and running the pump to clean out the filter, then putting in new DE again, but even this only buys me 30 minutes. So I have have since opened the filter 2 more times and completely cleaed the filter tentacles but even after doing this I am only getting a few minutes of good filtering before it clogs again.
The pool remains a disgusting green. I try to leave the filter on as long as I can but I just don't have enough time in the day to keep cleaning it every half hour, so it is not possible to filter 8-10 hours a day as needed. It's like a catch 22: in order to clear out the green pool I need to run the filter constantly, but because it is so dirty I cannot run the filter constantly.
As it stands now I have 10-12 gallons of shock in the pool over the past 2 weeks, and my chlorine level is actually OVER the ideal level. pH is normal, alk is ok. My thought is that there is so much algae in the pool that it is cloggin my filter in a bad way. When I open the filter up it is caked with sludge which I think is algae or maybe excess DE. The extreme amounts of chlorine have failed to make a dent in the greeness. At one point a few days ago I had the pool a cloudly teal, but a day later it went back to swamp green.
So what am I to do? Must I devote a few days of sitting by my pool cleaning the filter every 20 minutes? Should I continue to shock or use something else? I just don't see how I can get rid of the algae if I can't keep that filter running strongly for hours at a time. Is it possible something is wrong with the filter beyond it just getting dirty?
Sorry for the length, but please help!
Josh