1. Go to Sams Club and buy (2) 50# buckets of dichlor (~$240). Get a trial membership if you need to do so. Given the amount of dichlor you'll need, a Sams membership will be worth it for you. Together, those will add about 80 ppm of chlorine, and about 70 ppm of stabilizer to your pool.
2. Set your pump timer to run 24/7. Your pump and filter are too small for your pool, and you'll need to run more to make up. Once you've got everything straight, you may be able to switch to low speed.
Get the dichlor from Sams, ASAP. But if you can't do so immediately, add nightly doses of 6 pounds of cal hypo OR 5 gallons of PLAIN 8% household bleach. Do this EVERY evening. Add the doses ONLY in the late evening. If -- and only if -- your pool is crystal clear and algae free, you can cut those doses in 1/2.
Each time the pool is used by a swimmer, add 1 pound or 1 gallon of bleach during or immediately after their swim.
I'm reluctant to encourage you to use "liquid chlorine" (commercial bleach). It's hot summer, and bleach loses strength rapidly, unless it's stored cool (75 degrees or LESS). If you are buying boxed pool bleach, odds are you are NOT getting 10% bleach.
You can compare, though. Add 4 gallons of 10% bleach; test chlorine levels 2 hours later. Tomorrow, add 5 gallons of Walmart 8% bleach, test chlorine 2 hours later. If your 10% bleach is REALLY 10%, you'll see similar FC levels from both.
But maybe not. Your CC level above (1.2 ppm) suggests you've still got goo in the water. If so, to compare the bleach and the LC, you'll need to go for 4 consecutive nights: bleach, LC, LC, bleach, and then average the results for both the bleach and the LC before comparing. Make SURE you add all doses at about the same time each day, LATE in the day.
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