Re: Fighting the Mean Green
I have clear water for the first time in a year and I am thrilled! I have search pool solutions and have not found what I do next. Do I put any chlorine based product in the skimmer on a daily basis? If so what do you recommend? Should I use the polyquat now that it is clear or just skip it completely? When I shock it how much bleach should I use? If I'm understanding correctly I should shock to 20 ppm at night but will it drop enough by morning to swim in it? I'm sorry if I sound needy but I am scared as heck to end up like last year w/a green and/or cloudy pool.
This is my latest test results:
Chlorine - 9 ppm
Ph - 7.4
Alk - 70 ppm
Cya - 65
Other then my cya being high I think my numbers are good. I messed up with the dichlor and added too much so now i'm stuck w/the high cya. Will it stay that way all summer? How often should I test the cya?
Again THANK YOU for your continued patience,
Paige
Re: Fighting the Mean Green
Congratulations on the clear pool--ain't it great?? :cool:
I wouldn't worry about the polyquat--some of us never use it, some of us only use it for winterizing, or if you're dealing with metals in the pool. If none of those things apply, then just know that adequate chlorine levels will keep the algae away. With your CYA of 65, you want to keep your chlorine between 5 and 10 ppm at all times. If you need to shock it, shock it to 20 ppm until it clears again and you're not losing any chlorine overnight. There's nothing else you need to add on a daily basis, other than bleach. In a 22K gallon pool, each 3 quarts of 6% bleach will raise your FC by approximately 2 ppm, so you can use that as a guide when adding your daily bleach dose.
Your CYA may lower slightly over the summer, depending on how much you backwash the filter, and how much splashout you have, but that's the only way it will come down. I wouldn't bother testing it more than once a month unless you're adding more CYA via dichlor or trichlor, which I wouldn't do for your pool. It's fine where it is.
Take 5 minutes a day, test chlorine and adjust it as needed, test for pH once a week or so, and you should be good to go through the summer!!
Janet