That is a BIGGG pool! And it's a private residence?
Good luck finding 15% Liquid Chlorine! However, here in NJ, 12% is available in 2.5 and 5 gallon carboys. The place I get it from has so much turnover that their "12%" usually tests at 14-14.5%
With YOUR pool, figuring how much Free Chlorine a gallon will add is easy: Just multiply the percentage of the concentration by 10. So 1 gallon of 15% will add 1.5ppm of FC. 1 gallon of 8.25% will add .825ppm of FC.
But we do need a full screen of pool tests to be able to help.
That would be:
Free Chlorine (FC)
Combined Chloramines (CC) or Total Chlorine (TC)==> TC = FC + CC so if we have 2 we get the third.
pH
Total Alkalinity (TA or T/A)
Calcium Hardness (CH)
Stabilizer/Conditioner (CYA/Cyanuric Acid/Isocyanuric Acid)
Two carboys of nominal 12% run me about $35-$36 and, if they test at 14%, will add 14ppm of FC to your pool. Yeah, you'll need at least that much, maybe more, every dose, and you'll need multiple doses. But 100,000 gallons of water will probably cost far more.
If it turns out your stabilizer is low, Di-Chlor powder may be the way to rapidly raise both FC and CYA levels.
Ben is usually the best person to handle very large pools, but this is the first I remember that wasn't a public or commercial pool.
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