Here's another thing you can do:
You can buy liquid chlorine at a pool store in a 5 gallon carboy at 12.5%. Buy a carboy spigot, too, so you don't make a mess.
Fill up ten 1-gallon jugs half-way with tap water. Then fill them the rest of the way from the carboy. Presto! You have 10 gallons of 6% bleach to be stored in a cool, shady spot. 6% doesn't break down as fast as 12.5%
If you aren't sure of how strong it is, add 1 ml of the liquid chlorine to 10 liters of water (that's 5 soda bottles) and test it like it was your pool. The FC reading is the strength of the LC you bought.
Be sure to use tap water, not pool water, and, VERY IMPORTANT!!!! Put the water in FIRST, then the LC. It's very, VERY dangerous to do it the other way around.
Also keep an extra jug of water handy in case the LC splashes so if it lands on you, you can flush it immediately.
The carboy is a deposit bottle. I paid the deposit on 2 a few years ago and re-use them and re-use them.
'Course, Ben may tell you this is a bad idea, but until he does...I'm doing it!
Since the LC here is about $17/carboy, that works out to 6% bleach at $1.70/gallon--and the pool stores sell it for $2.49/gallon. Also cheaper than 6% bleach in our local supermarkets. Less waste, too, which was the whole thread of this thread.![]()
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