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Ongoing issues
Hope someone can help me. This season has so far been a bust And I am hoping to turn it around. Replaced de filter with hayward 244s model and am using 150 lbs of zeos sand. Filter replacement is done and be up and running for about 5 days. Pool was very dark green. Added a bottle of somethIng like swamp treatment as recommended by pool store. The next morning the pool surface was covered in an icky film. It's dissipated to some extent but its still really bad. I need to retreat the pool for algae but I don't want to cause any more foaming issues.
I have tried to scoop it out with my skimmer but it's more persistent than I am at this point. Any one have any ideas?
My ph is still too low it reads 6.8. On my test kit. Chlorine is in the 3-6 range
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Re: Ongoing issues
Yeah, it's actually pretty simple.
I'm guessing that since you are using a 300# sand filter you have at least 15,000 gallons.
You need to get your pH to 7.0 at least. Start by adding 1 box of 20 Mule Team Borax and wait an hour and check pH.
I"m also guessing your CYA (stabilizer) is very low.
Your chlorine is 'way too low to clear your pool.
Start by adding 1.5 gallons of 6% bleach for every 10,000 gallons. That will raise FC (free chlorine) by about 9ppm...bringing you to between 12 and 15ppm. That will start killing algae. This is based on my knowing nothing about your pool yet.
Test your water and add bleach whenever your FC drops below 12.
Meanwhile either test for, or have a pool store test for:
FC
CC (Combined Chloramines)
TC (Total Chlorine)
pH
Alk or T/A (Total Alkalinity)
CYA (Stabilizer, Cyanuric Acid, Conditioner)
CH (Calcium Hardness)
And let us know if your pool is vinyl or hard-sided, and how big it is.
Carl
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Re: Ongoing issues
Thanks for the quick reply. Will take water sample to store tomorrow and post results. Pool is vinyl inground and about 20k gallons.
AnythIng to do about the foam issue. Or should I get the chem right first?
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Re: Ongoing issues
really, the only thing we'll have you address at first is chlorination and pH. Everything else can wait but we need to know what they are. Heavy chlorination should take care of the foaming, too.
Carl
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Re: Ongoing issues
Do yourself a favor and buy a good test kit so you don't have to rely on the pool store. We recommend the Taylor K-2006 or 2006C. If you order it through the Amazon link in my signature, the Pool Forum makes a little money which helps keep this forum up and running. (Only buy from Amato Industries, however. Some of the other sellers through Amazon are substituting the K-2005 which you do NOT want.)
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Re: Ongoing issues
Carl I have put at least. 4 gallons of 12% chlorine since saturday so I bet its the cya. Will get results tomorrow and post.
Watermom looking at the test kit now. What the difference between the two? And I don't see it available from amato
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Re: Ongoing issues
The kits are the same, except the "c" version has larger amounts of reagents in it.
Keeping your chlorine above 12 ppm can take LOTS more than 4 gallons. You just have to keep testing and adding more until the pool clears up and the foam dissipates. The "swamp treatment" likely has created even more of a chlorine demand, and if your CYA was high at the end of last season, it also can breakdown over the winter into ammonia and create huge chlorine demands. THey can be overcome, but you need to be diligent about it.
Janet
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Re: Ongoing issues
I just looked at the Amazon links. Amato Industries must currently be sold out of the K-2006. Probably all the folks that we are sending from Pool Forum buying all their inventory! That has happened before, but usually in a few days, they again are showing up as having them available. But, they DO currently show the K-2006C as being in stock. That one is a better buy anyways.
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Re: Ongoing issues
Pool kit ordered...
Water tested...
Free Available Chl 0.12 - yikes
Total Chlorine 1.17
Combined Chl 1.05
Total Alkalinity 107
pH 6.9
Calcium Hardness 104
Cyanuric Acid 21
Walmart was out of Borax so I picked up 5lbs ph increaser and 8 gallons of 12% liquid shock. Store clerk told me she would use 2lbs of the ph increaser and 4 gallons of the shock. Is that the right advice?
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Re: Ongoing issues
We still need to know a few pool details- especially size...
The pH increaser will work, just a lot more expensive than the borax. I would shoot for a pH of 7.5, add however much of the increaser it tells you to dose based on pool size to get there, then just work the chlorine to clear the pool. Don't worry about anything else right now- pH between 7.0 and 7.8, and chlorine- probably 10-15 ppm chlorine until pool is clear, then we can work on the right numbers from there.