Originally Posted by Karin
I too had used Jack's Purple stuff and got into a discussion about it with one of the company's tech support. He admitted that there were phosphates, but not the real bad kind. As long as I didn't mix in any nitrates, I shouldn't have a bumper crop of algae. Huh? Why put them in your product in the first place?
Because phosphonic acid derivatives are the most effective sequaterants will the least side effect and have a proven track record in the water treatement industry. They are even used in drinking water! The danger of algae blooms is very slight since phosphates are rarely the 'limiting factor' in algae growth in pools! I would continue the seqesterants and not the phosphate remover treatments! Mustard algae usually starts when you get careless with maintaining your chlorine levels or your stabilizer levels get too high!
Nitrates are more of a problem since they are a favorite algae food and nitrogen compouds are constantly being added to pools from body secretions like perspiration!. They are what cause chloramines to form! Even chloramines are algae food! (but some, like monochoramine will kill algae when they eat it...this is how some mustard algae treatments actually work!)
I've seen some metal sequestrants which are labeled phosphate free.
The only one that I know of is NaturalChemistry's Metal Free. It is EDTA, a chelating agent.
I will relax on the phosphate remover and only add some sequestrant when I have to add water. (I got some yellow staining last time we did a partial pool refill. Whether it was from the algae, the new water or new salt, I don't know. Most of it seemed to go away after I added the sequestrant and phosphate remover.
Yes, I'm a pool shop's dream customer---GULLIBLE. But I'm learning.....pretty soon someone else will have to walk in my flip-flops. :o