JBonnette's Thread - New SWG
Hi All, I'm Joel from Denham Springs, Louisiana (just outside of Baton Rouge). We recently bought a new house with and are trying to get the pool up and running. I've been reading a good bit on the site and figured that I need to start posting questions since this is my first pool :).
I'm trying to get my pool under control after being a pond for the last 8-10 months. I had a SWG installed last week. Should I wait until I get the pool water under control before adding the salt?
Thanks!
Joel
Re: New Users! Start here, please.
You can add the salt, if you're sure you aren't going to have to drain the pool. Or not. Doesn't matter.
But, you should get your pool up and running BEFORE you turn on the salt units.
PoolDoc
Re: Cloudy Trouble-shooting!
If the 6 lbs of chlorine you added was dichlor, then that's probably why your pH dropped. However, 7.2 is actually ideal, so I wouldn't mess with it.
Keep in mind that when you have algae in the pool, the chlorine kills it, but the filter is what actually removes it from the water. That's more than likely the source of your cloudiness. I would avoid all the flocs and other additives that the pool store would have you add, and just keep your filter going 24/7, watching your pressure and backwashing as needed, and it will clear up the pool, provided that all the algae is dead.
That being said, you really need to shock the pool (Cl up to 12-15 ppm if that CYA number is correct, which I'm doubting) and hold it there until you can measure less than 1 ppm chlorine loss between sundown and sunup the next day. As the chlorine is used, add more as often as possible to maintain that 12-15, which is what it will take to kill the algae. Brush the pool daily, keep the filter running as I described above, and it will be clear in no time.
Janet