If you are good at maintaining your water chemistry, you don't need the weekly polyquat. I never use it at all.
If you are good at maintaining your water chemistry, you don't need the weekly polyquat. I never use it at all.
Like Watermom said, it's easier -- if you have the K-2006 -- just to run higher chlorine, than to add in another chemical.
Regarding cal hypo, anything at 65% or above is fine. Usually the 65 - 68% strength is a better deal. The 73+% strength is just made with a somewhat refined process. But, avoid the products below 65% -- as far as I know, they are all blends, with mystery ingredients. They are almost always LESS economical, and sometimes the mystery ingredients cause problems.
What about the method for applying the cal Hypo?
27' above ground ~18,000 gallon, 1.5 HP pump, sand filter. Have Taylor 2006 test kit. Use 3" tricholr in auto feeder.
Add it DIRECTLY to your skimmer, BUT
1. Make 1,000% sure that there are no chemicals of any kind anywhere in the lines or pump, between the skimmer and the filter.
2. Don't add when you've just backwashed the filter; wait till the pump has run 12 hours and loaded a little dirt into the filter.
Just remember, except for borax, cal hypo reacts BADLY with almost everything, including Coke, stabilizer, trichlor, dichlor, and more. It's fine once it's fully dissolved, and the filter will hold it, till it dissolves.
PoolDoc / Ben
And because I ask too many questions![]()
1) Add powder direct into skimmer, correct? Not pre-dissolved in a bucket and then add?
2)What is the advantage of this vs broadcasting on the surface?
27' above ground ~18,000 gallon, 1.5 HP pump, sand filter. Have Taylor 2006 test kit. Use 3" tricholr in auto feeder.
If you want to pre-dissolve it, and THEN put it the skimmer, that's OK. It's more work, and doesn't accomplish anything, though.
Without going into the chemistry, you end up with all the cloud from the cal hypo on the filter instead of the pool. There are both physical, and chemical aspects to this.
just to be double safe, would it be advisable to turn off my feeder for some amount of hours? Is there already a post somewhere that does explain the chemistry? I won't trouble to ask you to type it all out if there is not.
Thanks again for all your help.
27' above ground ~18,000 gallon, 1.5 HP pump, sand filter. Have Taylor 2006 test kit. Use 3" tricholr in auto feeder.
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