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  1. #1
    Watermom's Avatar
    Watermom is offline SuperMod Emeritus Quark Inspector Watermom 4 stars Watermom 4 stars Watermom 4 stars Watermom 4 stars Watermom 4 stars Watermom 4 stars
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    Barry J is offline Registered+ Thread Analyst Barry J 0
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    Default Re: Yellowish dirt

    Gave the numbers I have, chlorine, ph and alk.
    What else??

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    jwhouse is offline Registered+ Thread Analyst jwhouse 0
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    Default Re: Yellowish dirt

    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?

    You didn't actually give a number for chlorine. Only that it "came back good". How are you testing? Using strips, OTO or titrating drop kit?

    Sorry for all the questions but it's hard to give you an answer with such little info.
    30' round 22K gal AG vinyl pool; skimmer tabs and GV Bleach; Hayward SD60 sand filter; Pentair 1.5 HP pump; hrs; ; utility water; summer: none; winter: none; K-2006 Test Kit ; PF:5.5

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    Barry J is offline Registered+ Thread Analyst Barry J 0
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    Default Re: Yellowish dirt

    I'll go into pool later, but for now, the kit I'm using is a HTH kit, ..OTO and the chlorine by view looks to be 5 or higher, water is clear.
    Do I have too much chlorine in???? Did I need an algaecide or just shock and if algaecide what type???
    Thanks
    Barry

  5. #5
    aylad's Avatar
    aylad is offline SuperMod Emeritus Burfle Ringer aylad 4 stars aylad 4 stars aylad 4 stars aylad 4 stars aylad 4 stars aylad 4 stars
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    Default Re: Yellowish dirt

    Whether your chlorine is "good", "too much" or "too little" depends on your stabilizer level, which you haven't reported yet. If you can get us that, using the disappearing dot test rather than strips, then we can better help you.

    The best algaecide you can get is chlorine--and lots of it. Whether you just have dirt/pollen or actual algae growing is sometimes hard to tell, unless you can measure how much chlorine you're losing overnight when the sun isn't out.You can't measure that accurately with an OTO kit, which is why we recommend the K-2006 kit that can be found in the link in my sig.

    HOwever, at the very least, we're going to need to know your CYA level to help you with your questions...

  6. #6
    Barry J is offline Registered+ Thread Analyst Barry J 0
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    Default Re: Yellowish dirt

    I only had two test (dot) in my kit for cya , being the end of the season don't want to go out and buy a whole new kit. So maybe I'll just go on the guess that I need more stabilizer and put that in, it's been awhile. But wouldn't my cl level be low if I needed more stabilizer???

  7. #7
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    Default Re: Yellowish dirt

    Not necessarily. Usually, whatever you had for CYA will be close to what you have now. It doesn't drop on it's own. You can get more reagent from Amazon, or go directly to Taylor website and order it. The Walmart HTH kit is a rebranded Taylor kit. The reagent you want is R-0013. Best to get the 2oz bottles.

    If you know your CYA level, you can use the Best guess chart to determine your ideal FC level.

    There is a way to use the OTO kit for measuring higher than 5 on your chlorine, but I don't have the link handy for those instructions. Be aware also that this method isn't that accurate, but is better than "guess strips".

    Now you know why the Mods here are always pushing the Taylor K-2006 kit. You would be money ahead to purchase it, through the links from any of the mod's signatures.
    15' round 4.8K gal Intex AG pool; Intex 633 pump with twin canisters (2500 gph main filtering); Unicel 5315 filter cartridges; Intex 637 pump w/o filter (1000 gph heater circulation); 4hrs; K-2006; utility water; PF:24

  8. #8
    aylad's Avatar
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    Default Re: Yellowish dirt

    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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