Thank You so much for your quick response.
Thank You so much for your quick response.
I checked with the city refuse where I live, they told me I could just throw them in the trash. You can check with you local refuse center to find out how to dispose of them.Originally Posted by Krissti5
~Dr. Spike
Pool: IG vinyl, heated, fully enclosed (dome)
Shape: Grecian (rectangular)
Size: 20'W x 40'L
Depth: 4' / 8'
Filter: Sand w/DE added
Other: 6' Diving Board
Maintenance: BBB! Ben's PS234 kit! Manual vacuum, brush, and Pool Buster Max CG Gold
The refuse person isn't the sharpest knife in the drawer. I wouldn't throw them in the trash. You may have the recipe for a fire if there are any oily rags or other hydrocarbon stuff in with them. Besides, what else if in the trash truck when they compact? Why not just use up the ones in the floater? Won't affect CYA that much. The measurement isn't accurate enough to tell. I would keep any unused pucks for when you have to raise CYA.
Al
This is probably true, they may not be the sharpest (no offence to any refuse workers). One would probably be better off taking them to a hazardous waste drop off site.
~Dr. Spike
Pool: IG vinyl, heated, fully enclosed (dome)
Shape: Grecian (rectangular)
Size: 20'W x 40'L
Depth: 4' / 8'
Filter: Sand w/DE added
Other: 6' Diving Board
Maintenance: BBB! Ben's PS234 kit! Manual vacuum, brush, and Pool Buster Max CG Gold
I realize this is a late reply but I agree with keeping any left over pucks you have (is this what you were asking?) I switched to BBB after getting my CYA level where I wanted it but I just went through a "cloudiness" period - did several shocks and backwashing of the filter. Because I had to add water after backwashing I was glad to have 3" pucks left over to reload the autochlorinator in order to increase my CYA back to where it needed to be.
I'd also agree with using up any pucks already in a floater if for nothing other than safety reasons.
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