1. Bromine test is IDENTICAL to chlorine test; there aren't any field tests that can tell the two apart. With a chlorine test result for 15 ppm -- if it were accurate -- you should show a bromine level of 2.2 x 15 or 33 ppm bromine. The fact that you show 25 ppm is just a measurement error. In actual fact, you probably have ZERO bromine in your pool.
Let me put it another way. If you have a pool with zero bromine, and an actual free chlorine level of exactly 1.0 ppm FC, and then test that pool for bromine, your test results will show 2.25 ppm bromine. Likewise, if you have a pool with zero chlorine, and an actual free bromine level of exactly 4.5 ppm FC, and then test that pool for chlorine, your test results will show 2 ppm chlorine.
Clear as mud?
Short version? Ignore the bromine test results!
2. Ignore the acid demand results, too. (At least for now!)
3. Household bleach is 8.25% sodium hypochlorite. "Liquid chlorine" -- if it's fresh -- is 10 - 16% sodium hypochlorite. Another name for 'liquid chlorine' is "commercial bleach".
4. You still need to measure your pool. It's probably not 15,000 gallons, either.
5. If everything is blue AND the chlorine is still high, BRUSH the pool. There are probably still pockets of algae, and you want to expose them to the chlorine while it remains high.
6. Run your pump 24/7. Do NOT backwash, till you see a 5 psi pressure increase above whatever the 'clean' pressure was. (This assumes that your gauge works properly).
7. Have you ordered a K2006? You're gonna need it. Actually, you need it now. Or rather, along with your pool dimensions, I really, really need to know what your actual alkalinity, calcium hardness, and especially, CYA levels are.
Test strips do NOT count!! Test strip accuracy is often bad, and CYA test results are normally horribly inaccurate.
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