It's not that you need more stabilizer--it's that you need a shock level of chlorine in order to kill off the algae, and you can't determine how high the chlorine needs to be if you don't know your stabilizer level...
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It's not that you need more stabilizer--it's that you need a shock level of chlorine in order to kill off the algae, and you can't determine how high the chlorine needs to be if you don't know your stabilizer level...
Quote: "Can you touch it? If you can touch it, try to pinch some between your fingers and look at it out of the pool. Does it feel like sand or is it of a more fine consistency than sand?
If you can't touch it, does it seem to disappear when you try? Are your walls or floor slick or slimy to the touch?
Is your water clear or other"
I went in today, I cannot pinch it, seems to disolve, so not sand, it's yellowish, so I'm thinking algae, walls and floor not slimy.
I got some shock and stabilizer. I figured vaccuming, then dumping a gal of shock in and some stabilzer and letting it run for 24 hours
any suggestions
Barry
Now is when all your test numbers come into play which is why everyone keeps asking for them. If it is indeed algae, especially mustard algae, we will definitely need to know what your FC, CC, PH, TA, CH and CYA levels are before proceeding. Maintaining the proper chemestry during the high chlorine levels that will be required to kill it is important so we will need them for this purpose and to know exactly how high the chlorine will need to be.
Please report those to us and then we can formulate a plan to help you get it cleared up.