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Thread: Closed pool with Iron Stains + Pink Algae... Now What?

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    mbar's Avatar
    mbar is offline Lifetime Member Whizbang Spinner mbar 3 stars mbar 3 stars mbar 3 stars mbar 3 stars
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    I don't think it is as bad as all of that!!! I don't know where the iron comes from, I have been trying to figure that out for 6 years. I do know that once I get the pool treated and balanced, I usually don't have any more problems. If you keep up with your chlorine, you never need to shock. That is what I try to do - keep up with the water. Fiberglass pools are actually very easy to keep - there aren't any rough surfaces to get algae in. The most important thing is to keep your ph around 7.4- 7.6 - not higher. I also run my pool with a cya under 50, so I don't need high chlorine levels. I use regular bleach, baking soda, and borax. The only other chemical I use is the metal free (and ascorbic acid if I have stain). If I ever do have to shock, I put a puck in the basket, and use regular bleach in the pool with the filter running all the time. The high clorine levels will drop out any metals that are in the water, so by keeping the filter running with a puck in the basket, the metals in the water will stain the filter instead of the surface of the pool. It seems that when the water stands (filter off), is when the stains grab onto the surface of the pool. I think a lot of pools have stains, but the white fiberglass is more suseptible and the stains seem to show out so much. Once you get used to your own pool, and your water (it is all different) you will be able to keep the pool so easily. This will be my 7th year with my pool, and it really is simple if kept up with. My family laugh at me, because I actually love "pool maintenance".
    Northeast PA
    16'x32' kidney 16K gal IG fiberglass pool; Bleach; Hayward 200lb sand filter; Hayward pump; 24hrs; Pf200; well; summer: none; winter: mesh; ; PF:7.5

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    waste is offline PF Support Team Whizbang Spinner waste 3 stars waste 3 stars waste 3 stars
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    Default Logic ... not experience

    Though Marie makes lucid and convincing arguments for getting the algae out first, it seems better to address the metal first. The swim season isn't close, at least here in Ct., and once the metal is out of the pool, it's only a matter of days to kill that persnickity algae. I'd also wait to add the cya until the big backwashings (from metal removal and algae destruction) are finnished.
    As a side question - why not put a powerful magnet in the skimmer to remove iron? Wrap it in plastic, so it won't rust, and let it pick up the iron ions.(OK, maybe they aren't ions, but I couldn't resist the alliteration )
    Finding out where the iron is comming from, though, sounds like the best first course of action. If it's the water supply, and you can feasably do it, drain the pool and truck in non-iron water. If you can get all the metal out, you've all but won the battle, just a little high cl for a week and pinky's gone. An added bonus is that you can start fresh, chemically, and get all your numbers where you want them.
    Luv & Luk, Ted

    Having done construction and service for 4 pool companies in 4 states starting in 1988, what I know about pools could fill a couple of books - what I don't know could fill libraries

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    mbar's Avatar
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    I understand your logic. I can only go by my experience - I tried logic with the stains, but it got me no where. I then decided to figure out what was the best way to keep my pool stain free. I tried to find out where the iron was coming from - my water tests that there is no iron in it. I still get stains.... So I just treat the water at the beginning of the season - with metal free before I add the chlorine and balance the water. If I get stains, I treat them, but I find that if I keep my water balanced so I don't have to shock, or run high chlorine levels, I don't have problems with stains. So this was just my advice - I don't promise that it is right, or logical. I just gave my experience on what I did, and what I thought was the best and cheapest way to go.
    Northeast PA
    16'x32' kidney 16K gal IG fiberglass pool; Bleach; Hayward 200lb sand filter; Hayward pump; 24hrs; Pf200; well; summer: none; winter: mesh; ; PF:7.5

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