Here are some pics I took the other day of the stained areas...
Any thoughts???
MyPool
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Here are some pics I took the other day of the stained areas...
Any thoughts???
MyPool
![]()
I am not an expert on metals in pools but I do have bit of a chemistry background. Your stains look more like iron than copper based on the color. Copper strains are usually blue to black. I am sure your water tests positive for copper unless you have drained and acid washed your pool you probably have a coating of copper deposited in your pool from your ionizer. Could your fill water have a high iron content? I have read posts on here on using ascorbic acid (vitamin c) to remove the stains and I know that many of the commercial stain removing products the pool stores sell are just ascorbic acid. Try taking a vitamin C tablet and holding it on the stain and see if the stain goes away. If it does then you know what you need to treat the stain. A sequestering/chelating agent usually will not remove a metal deposit. It only ties up metal ions in the water so they do not percipitate out as a stain.
Hope I've been of some help.
Hi, Summer,
I have never had a metal issue but I think "Waterbear"'s post has it just right. It certainly looks like iron to me and the cure I see on this forum time and time again is vitamin C. It's available in bulk and I've seen folks here post where to get it but I can't remember. Someone will post soon, I'm sure.
Dave S.
P.S. be cautious about shocking 'til you get the iron (if it's iron) out of the pool.
Last edited by duraleigh; 03-28-2006 at 10:10 PM.
Thanks so much for your replies, Waterbear & Dave! I really appreciate your help.
I had not considered iron...
But where is it coming from??? We are on municipal water and Baton Rouge's water is notoriously SOFT (aggravatingly so!).
Also, I am not a scientist (my degree is in history) but why wouldn't Metal Out remove iron from the water?
Finally, I know NOTHING about using ascorbic acid... do I need to stop the chlorine (I use a feeder with the discs) and do I need to let the chlorine level drop before adding the asc. acid?
I'm sorry to be such a novice; this is all still very new to me!
Thanks again,
Soft water just removes calcium hardness. It has nothing to do with any possible dissoved metals which can come from numerous sources such as pipes, the ground your water source comes from, pollution, etc. It is possible to have soft water with a high iron content. First step would be to check your water for all metals. I have a big distrust of pool store testing from my own experiences. One time I brought in two different samples, one from my spa and one from my pool, and did not tell them that they were a connected system and that I had my spillover running for 4 hours right before I took the samples. One sample tested as having very low CYA and the other sample was low on CH and had very high TDS. I suspect it was error on the part of the (what looked like) high school girl who was doing the testing. There is a compnay that is supposed to make a metal stain identifying kit (I think it's Jack's Magic but I don't know anything about it) and Taylor sells kits for testing for varous metals as do other testkit companies (LaMotte). There might even be test strips that will at least tell you if metals are present but I would not trust them to tell you at what concentration. Iron is your most likely culprit and you probably still have a lot of copper in your pool. It might not be in the water but it is deposited on the surface and can leach back into the water if your pH drops.
Good luck on fighting the stains!
Oh, wow. Ok, that makes sense. Guess I'll be going to buy a metal test kit.
I don't really trust my pool store completely, either. Although, I do not go to a national chain store (whose name I won't mention) that seems to be run by uneducated teenagers -- we do have one nearby, but I won't go there!
My store is a family-owned business that has been around for about 20 years and the owners (mid-50's couple) do all the testing themselves. But I still don't trust them implicitly because they are running a business and they profit from my *needing* more chemicals. That's why I joined this forum.
I think you have a excellent point & I will get that water tested right away!
BTW, it's now been nearly 36 hours with the Metal Out and there is NO change in the stain. DEFINITELY the wrong course of action...
Thanks!
Alright, I did a little *research* and read about a "vitamin C test" to see if ascorbic acid is what I need...
I took a handful of Vitamin C (chewable orange juice tablets) and put them in a white sock and secured it with a rubber band. Then I used a hammer to break the tablets down to a large gravel (not powder). I then tied this sock on to my pool brush and used the brush to hold the sock against the stain for 30 minutes.
There doesn't appear to be any difference in the stain!![]()
Now, does that mean I do NOT need to use ascorbic acid or was that a total waste of my time (and my expensive Vit. C tablets)???
HELP! I don't want to spend any more money on this than I have to...
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