If your pool is turning green, then your chems are not 'right on.' You might want to post a current set of water testing results and let us take a look at them and see if we can help you get the pool cleared up. Welcome to the Pool Forum!
If your pool is turning green, then your chems are not 'right on.' You might want to post a current set of water testing results and let us take a look at them and see if we can help you get the pool cleared up. Welcome to the Pool Forum!
Hi Melissa;
You don't have to take your pool down, unless you prefer to do so.
Another way to state Watermom's point about your chemicals being "right on" is this: your chemical levels can all be within NSPI (defunct), NSPF, or APSP standards and still be wrong . . . because the standards are seriously in error.
When I started PoolSolutions over 15 years ago -- after I'd already been a CPO instructor for 5+ years -- I knew that the CPO (NSPI / NSPF) standards were incorrect at a number of points. I also knew that running pools differently always worked in my local area, enough so that I would have an optional 4 hour add-on to the CPO classes I taught, entitled "Correcting CPO methods so you can run your pool effectively". But, I wasn't sure that my methods would work everywhere. And I wasn't sure of the chemistry behind some of my methods.
But, now, 15 years and 100,000's of people later . . . I'm sure: they work everywhere. And, Chem_Geek (Richard Falk) has worked out the chemistry behind all of it.
Unfortunately, the NSPF and ASPS haven't moved very far from where they were 25 years ago: much of what they teach is simply wrong. That's not likely to change anytime soon. Publishing the BBB method as the standard of pool care would cut chemical sales so much it would bankrupt all the pool chemical companies and most chemical only pool stores.
The result is, your chems can be absolutely "right on" by the all the 'standard' standards . . . and still be wrong, as demonstrated by your green pool.
The immediate fix for your pool is to raise your chlorine levels, using the "Best Guess" page as a guideline. (We still call it that, but it's no longer my "Best Guess" -- Richard has seen to that!). A link to that page is my signature.
One caution though: the tiny filters that come with Intex pools do a very poor job of removing dead algae. If you want a CLEAR blue pool, instead of a cloudy blue one, you may want to order their add-on sand filter.
PoolDoc / Ben
Thanks so much! I am going to look into a new filter, I do prefer DE but anything is better than what I have. I just added bleach to the pool a few hours ago and my chlorine, per my cheap test kit (4 way test strips), is over 10ppm more like 15ppm
Alk is 80
pH is 7.8
cya is low about 10-20, I think...man I feel like a newbie but at least I have this forum.
Yeah, DE is better for absolute water clarity, but a properly sized sand filter is the easiest to use. Anyhow, I don't think a DE filter is available for those pools.
PoolDoc / Ben
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