Actually, I have commercial indoor pools that have used it for over a year, and yes, it does work. Expensive yes,but it prevents down time from refilling commercial pools.
Actually, I have commercial indoor pools that have used it for over a year, and yes, it does work. Expensive yes,but it prevents down time from refilling commercial pools.
"Ive installed the Jandy units for my customers"
'Tailgunner99', the requirement that industry members ID them selves in EVERY post is not optional.
At a minimum, you must include your real first name, last initial, and your company name (or work role, like "service tech") in your signature.
-Ben (PoolDoc)
Why is there CYA in an indoor pool to begin with?
Watermom
HU? Who said anything about an indoor pool?Why is there CYA in an indoor pool to begin with?
If it truly does work, I can see where it would be beneficial to use it in an area that has water rationing or restrictions and you have a high CYA. I can see how it would be worth it (even at $50 a gallon) if you didn't want to risk getting high fines for excessive water use in a draught area that has strict laws about that kind of thing (water usage).
Sherra
Kershaw County South Carolina
18x34 IG 2' radius rectangle vinyl liner (approx 27,500 gal) 1 1/2" pipes installed March 2006
(previous AG pool owner)
Be careful! The only documented chemical we are aware of that removes CYA causes more trouble than it relieves. I believe it's "Melamine".
You could use the "swamp" method to lower CYA. You let your FC go to 0, let algae grow and prosper for a couple of months, during which time it will consume CYA. Then you have to clean up the mess! (but the CYA will be lower)
Carl
[QUOTE=Sherra]HU? Who said anything about an indoor pool?
Sherra, the reason I asked about why it was used was because of what Tailgunner wrote in his post:
"Actually, I have commercial indoor pools that have used it for over a year, and yes, it does work. Expensive yes,but it prevents down time from refilling commercial pools."
Watermom
I researched what to so with the same problem. I was unsure about the product so I went with something I knew would definetly work. I drained the pool. But anyone with this problem should be sure to drain as much as you can the first time. We live in FLA and have to worry about ground water pushing the pool shell out of the water in the summer. We drained about 2/3's but had to do it twice. It cost us about $ 80.00. We,ve not had a problem since. One might want to find out why the problem happened though, so it doesn't happen again. We were using too much chlorine that had stabilizer in it. (The tabs and powder shock)
Last edited by 2005phyllis; 04-13-2006 at 10:00 PM.
[quote=Watermom]AH! I read through the messages twice after I read your message about the indoor pool trying to figure out why you were referencing indoor poolsOriginally Posted by Sherra
and I swear I didn't see the word "indoor" in anyones message until you quoted it just now.
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Sherra
Kershaw County South Carolina
18x34 IG 2' radius rectangle vinyl liner (approx 27,500 gal) 1 1/2" pipes installed March 2006
(previous AG pool owner)
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