Since we mainly advocate using bleach or the stronger version, Liquid Chlorine, we see THAT as the best savings.
Anyone have any experience with this stuff? I use about 120lbs through out the year.....looking to save a few bucks, over Leslie's.
http://www.samsclub.com/sams/poolbra....ip?navAction=
Thoughts?
Since we mainly advocate using bleach or the stronger version, Liquid Chlorine, we see THAT as the best savings.
Carl
Bleach bottles become a lot of trash.....especially at 6 bottles a week. If I could get it in bulk, 55 gallon barrels......that would be easy. Please tell me where i can get liquid chlorine in bulk? I would like to buy it bulk, move it in once a year, out in the fall. I agree bleach is easier, but man moving boxes of the stuff, then having to throw it all away, is cumbersome. I can not just burn the trash here in the city, and they only allow so much in your bin...
Do you test your CYA levels regularly? Using only trichlor for sanitizing can lead to runaway cyanuric acid levels over time.
rectangle 11.5K gal IG concrete pool;; 125sf cartridge filter; 2hp 1 speed pump; K-2006, k-1766; PF:10
55 gallons? Never seen it. But 5 gallon carboys of 12.5% LC are common. They reusable--you pay a deposit on each, so there's no waste, and they hold the equivalent of (at least) 10 gallons of 6% bleach.
Here, in NJ, they are common, both in 5 gallon and 2.5 gallon size. I usually have 3 and have to trade them in and get new about 3 times a summer (at most), at about $17/carboy.
If your pool store has a high turnover, they may test as high as 14%, which means you need less.
Carl
Cya test daily, or atleast 3 times a week. In HOT Texas, I run it up to 100 or higher....to combat sun loss of chlorine....I looked at 55gal of 10% industrial bleach, but it wasnt cheap, andwould had to re-configure the chart~
It is *NEVER* necessary to test CYA 3x per week, much less daily.
Under normal operations, your CYA level is a direct result of CYA added (either as CYA or as stabilized chlorine) MINUS any leakage or splash out. Neither sunlight nor evaporation removes CYA. If your pool gets really slimey, you can lose your CYA over a week or so, but that ONLY happens when there's substantial bacterial growth in the pool.
Regarding 55 gallons of bleach for home pools -- NEVER get it in that volume, unless you can keep it cool -- under 75 degrees. Industrial bleach degrades as a function of temperature and purity. Normal purity industrial bleach can go from 10% to 5% in 2 weeks of high temperature storage (> 90 deg F.)
PoolDoc / Ben
I'm trying to get my head around the cost benefit of using liquid bleach (sodium hypochlorite) vs triclor. My pool supply warehouse has 15 gallons of 12.5% at $95 compared to 40lbs of triclor at $85. Running the numbers through the calculator indicates there nearly 3x more FC in the triclor. Being a chemist, I'm definitely on board with most everything advocated on BBB; I just can't get past this on point. And to be clear, I'm not trying to be a wise guy. I just want a clear picture of how I'll maintain my pool this summer with opening day being next weekend.
16x60 rectangle 30.9K* gal IG concrete pool; trichlor feeder; Sta Rite Crytal Flow sand filter; 1.5 HP 1 speed pump; 24 hrs; heat pump; Aqua Chem Strips; well; summer: solar; winter: mesh; android tablet; PF:3.9
Hey Carl, where do you get 5 gal car boys in north NJ. Pool store with same name as guy from the Airplane movies ?
NJ Pool: In Ground, 40,000 Gal vinyl liner, chlorinated using BBB, Gas Heated, DE Grid filtration.
FL Pool: 10K gal gunite, chlorinated with 3'' pucks, cartridge filter, spill over spa
I generally like to get it at Sun Pools on rt 22 in Greenbrook. National Pools also used to sell it, but the rt 22 store east of Sun Pools closed and if there are others, I don't know, as has Branch Brook (Napco). Pelican Pools on Rt 10 in Randolph(?) and other places sells, I think, 2 1/2 gallon jugs--costs a bit more that way. Search by phone. I like Sun Pools best because when I test their 12% it always comes up at 14%--they turn over a HUGE amount each season. Branch Brook's "12%" tested at around 9-10% making it a poor deal and meant it sat too long. Rix Pools in East Hanover on Ridgedale sells the 2 1/2 gals--I think.
Carl
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