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  1. #1
    Join Date
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    Default Re: The green algae tint that will not go away

    Quote Originally Posted by FormerBromineUser View Post
    .
    Carl's got you. You are in great hands!!!

    Just an aside and my apologies for side-tracking your current issue...

    Next year, try opening earlier before your water temp gets above 60 degrees or so. I have watched my neighbor with a mesh cover open early: sparkling. Late: brown. No guarantees or expertise here, just an observation. And a thought.
    Quote Originally Posted by Orion View Post
    My pool closing guy also suggested switching to a solid cover. Just waiting for the time when the mesh is dead before spending the money.
    Our pool came with a mesh safety cover. In order to avoid opening to a green pool I had to wait until late Nov to close, and had to open by beginning of March. What a pain.

    After a few seasons of that, I decided to "convert" to a solid cover. Since the mesh cover was still in great shape and a new solid safety cover would be expensive, I just bought an inexpensive tarp style cover and placed that over the mesh cover. Since doing this (I think adding borates helped too), I can now close in early Oct and open in early May with no green pool. One season I couldn't open until June 8th and the pool was still clear!

    Definitely get a proper test kit (the Taylor K2006 is the one recommended here) and perform a proper shock; keep FC at or a bit above shock level, appropriate for your CYA level according to the Best Guess Chart, until these three condition are met;

    1. Pool is clear
    2. CC is .5 or less
    3. Overnight FC loss is 1ppm or less
    22'x40' Grecian Lazy L 20K gal IG vinyl pool; Aqua Rite SWCG T15 cell; Hayward Pro Grid 6020 DE filter; Hayward Superpump 1hp pump; 12 hrs; Taylor K-2006; city; PF:6

  2. #2
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    Default Re: The green algae tint that will not go away

    I'm now at a loss. I had the water tested to find all was in order (some low ALK), but 0.4 ppm iron (no copper). They gave me a bottle of Metal Away, or whatever it is called (yes, yes, I know...) and it did nothing I can see. They also threw in a couple of the sock bags and said to run it for a couple of days, backwash, repeat.

    Although the backwash did show a healthy amount of brown, the water remains green-tinted and hazy in the deep end (clear but tinted in shallow).

    All I have left to try is to add some DE to the sand filter, and also hunt for a proper chelation agent.

    Any other thoughts?

  3. #3
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    Default Re: The green algae tint that will not go away

    You need to post full test results.



    If you have iron from what I know you cant really get rid of it.

    You probably need to shock the pool and keep it there for a while. If iron stains are an issue then use the pink stuff here but follow the instructions..

    http://www.jacksmagic.com/products/JMPINK032.html
    12x18 vinyl AG 6.2K gal; Hayward equp: 16" sand filter (spring clean up) -- Xtream 100 sft cart (after clean up) -- Power Flo Matrix 1hp 2spd pump w/ AO Smith motor

  4. #4
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    Default Re: The green algae tint that will not go away

    Plus what are you adding to the pool?

    Common source of copper is copper-based algaecides. The cheaper ones often supply copper ions rather than complexes and, if too much is used, will result in green pool water.

    If the water changes color after chlorine (or any other oxidizer) is added, the swimming pool water probably contains a metal.


    Shock the pool to oxidize the metal, which then settles out of solution and looks like rust. The rust can easily be vacuumed out of the pool.

    Add a sequestering or chelating agent, which forms complexes with the metal and prevents it from being oxidized by the chlorine.

    If the source of the copper or iron cannot be established or if it cannot be avoided, regular addition of a chelating agent or sequestering agent (metal out products) will ensure that any new metal arriving in the pool water will be held in an inactive complex.
    12x18 vinyl AG 6.2K gal; Hayward equp: 16" sand filter (spring clean up) -- Xtream 100 sft cart (after clean up) -- Power Flo Matrix 1hp 2spd pump w/ AO Smith motor

  5. #5
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    Default Re: The green algae tint that will not go away

    The previous sample tested at 16.5 ppm free chlor. I raised the ALK. Ph was 7.2

    I never use anything except borax (ph was quite low when opened) and the 5-gallon liquid chlor. Aside from that, some granular shock from Walmart or Home Depot.

    The water was brown/green lake water when opened, and I shock/add liquid chlor right away. So there is no way to tell if this added to the metals problem. Same routine I follow every year except that about half of the water was trucked in last season (the rest from the muni - garden hose).

    The pool has been doused with chlorine for weeks.

    I can't tell if the color is due to staining, as the first few inches of the liner are normal (no water level changes over the winter). Although I can easily see my aquabot in the deep end, it is a bit murky.

    I'll take another test tonight and post. The pool store has a fancy new test rig, so I mainly ignore the suggestions to add $50 of "ph up" and whatnot, except for the Metal Away bottle which is Latin for "twenty bucks away".

  6. #6
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    Default Re: The green algae tint that will not go away

    The previous sample tested at 16.5 ppm free chlor.
    What test kit are you using to test your shock levels?
    Whats your CYA level? ( Pucks will not raise it fast enough IMO. Is a slow process for that size pool)

    I would back wash filter, and add DE till the psi goes up a 1 lb.

    ( A good test to to see if you have a filter issue. Dump DE in the skimmer real fast and look at the return. No white should come out return. If it does that indicates filter issues)

    Once filter is running with DE run on high 24/7, Keep at shock level..
    Get some clarifier and add that per instructions. 4 oz per 10k gallons I believe.
    Get the pink stuff I linked to and add that per instructions.

    Post back and let us know what happens in a day or two.

    Note::::: Vaccuum and brush the pool after you add the bleach in the evening. Do this every day... I can tell you how many issues are just from not brushing the walls and vacuuming....
    12x18 vinyl AG 6.2K gal; Hayward equp: 16" sand filter (spring clean up) -- Xtream 100 sft cart (after clean up) -- Power Flo Matrix 1hp 2spd pump w/ AO Smith motor

  7. #7
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    Default Re: The green algae tint that will not go away

    Ok, so here are the latest measurements using the pool store computer: (my Taylor kit is still being pondered by Amazon)

    FC: 3.15 (notice the drop from 16+ from the last time)
    CC: 0.59
    TC: 3.74
    PH: 7.7
    Hardness: 27 ppm
    ALK: 119 ppm
    CYA: 12 ppm
    Copper - 0
    Iron - 0.4 ppm

    The guy explained that when total and free chlor are close, it leads to murky water.
    They also suggested adding 65 pounds of 'Calcium Hardness Control' to bring that up.

    Then, a bottle of Metal Away followed by 8 capfuls of Alum (some sort of sequestering agent) to the skimmer and let it run for 48 hours, then backwash and repeat.

    Just for fun, I put in a few Ascorbic acid tabs in a calm section to observe any change to the liner - nothing.

    The murk seems a bit better today, so perhaps it is just a matter of continued filtering? The liner verticals look good (blue).
    Edit: adding in a bit of DE as well. Shame it only comes in 25lb boxes.

    Is the Pink Stuff similar to the Alum? Between the shipping cost and delay, I'd hate to have to go that route (nobody sells it locally).

  8. #8
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    Default Re: The green algae tint that will not go away

    65 pounds of 'Calcium Hardness Control' to bring that up.
    Vinyl pools dont need to adjust hardness levels for any reason.. waste of $$$


    Then, a bottle of Metal Away followed by 8 capfuls of Alum (some sort of sequestering agent)
    Dont know the brand of metal away so cant read whats in it unless you provide a link...


    aluminum sulfate
    That would of been a last resort... What a labor intensive issue that stuff creates. I would not want it in my pool but good luck.. Youll have fun trying to vacuum the bottom of the pool after everything settles..

    Would of rather you tried the blue stuff which is a cationic (positively charged) polymer. PolydimethyldiallyammoniumChloride
    12x18 vinyl AG 6.2K gal; Hayward equp: 16" sand filter (spring clean up) -- Xtream 100 sft cart (after clean up) -- Power Flo Matrix 1hp 2spd pump w/ AO Smith motor

  9. #9
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    Default Re: The green algae tint that will not go away

    Quote Originally Posted by Orion View Post
    Ok, so here are the latest measurements using the pool store computer: (my Taylor kit is still being pondered by Amazon)

    FC: 3.15 (notice the drop from 16+ from the last time)
    CC: 0.59
    TC: 3.74
    PH: 7.7
    Hardness: 27 ppm
    ALK: 119 ppm
    CYA: 12 ppm
    Copper - 0
    Iron - 0.4 ppm

    The guy explained that when total and free chlor are close, it leads to murky water.
    They also suggested adding 65 pounds of 'Calcium Hardness Control' to bring that up.

    Then, a bottle of Metal Away followed by 8 capfuls of Alum (some sort of sequestering agent) to the skimmer and let it run for 48 hours, then backwash and repeat.

    Just for fun, I put in a few Ascorbic acid tabs in a calm section to observe any change to the liner - nothing.

    The murk seems a bit better today, so perhaps it is just a matter of continued filtering? The liner verticals look good (blue).
    Edit: adding in a bit of DE as well. Shame it only comes in 25lb boxes.

    Is the Pink Stuff similar to the Alum? Between the shipping cost and delay, I'd hate to have to go that route (nobody sells it locally).
    Sorry I've been away from this thread for a while. The guy in the pool store is full of it.

    "The guy explained that when total and free chlor are close, it leads to murky water."
    I don't have a polite word for this, it's SO wrong! The IDEAL is when TC and FC are the same. The farther apart they are, the more CC you have and the bigger the problem.

    The numbers he generated from the test don't make any sense either. You cannot measure to hundreths of a PPM by any test kit I know of outside of a science lab.
    ASSUMING (and it's a big assumption) that the numbers really are:
    FC=3.2, CC=.6, TC=3.8, pH=7.7, T/A=120, CYA=10, Copper=0 and Iron =.4
    It indicates you do NOT still have a metal problem.

    Adding 65 lbs of calcium hardness control will do NOTHING but lighten your wallet. Calcium is solely to protect the plaster and mortar in hard-sided pools, nothing else.

    The "pink stuff" is not alum. However, if you just dump it in, it doesn't work. Unfortunately, you need to lower your FC before the metals are dissolved and suspended safely.

    IF your latest numbers are right, you're back to the basics--Shock and keep shocking, filter 24/7, brush the walls and bottom, and vacuum to waste daily. Consistency and persistence is the key. Randomly throwing in stuff won't work.

    Sorry.
    Carl

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