Just realized I forgot to give my info:
32x16 oval above ground
11,500 gallons
Sand Filter
Just realized I forgot to give my info:
32x16 oval above ground
11,500 gallons
Sand Filter
Answered my own question on the stabilizer, that doesn't go in until after the conversion is complete.
In one sense, chlorine is chlorine. So you can use Walmart bags, but you're gonna need a lot of them. They add either stabilizer, which you don't want now, or calcium, which is OK until it gets too high.
But bleach or liquid chlorine is the best. You can get blue 5 gallon carboys of 12.5% at most pool stores--that's like 10 gallons of ultra bleach.
You basically will run Free Chlorine way, WAY up to at least 15ppm and keep it there, checking it 2 to 3x/day to keep it there, running your filter 24/7, and backwashing regularly for a couple of weeks. Then, when it's ALL clear of Bacqua-glop., you will clean your filter. If it's DE, you'll take it apart like for a winterizing cleaning. If it's cartridge, you'll replace the cartridge. If it's sand, you'll replace the sand.
The process of conversion is incredibly simple, but that doesn't make it easy.
Carl
Thanks CarlD,
If I go the bleach route am I stuck using bleach from here on out or can I start using the store bought chlorine. Not sure why my hubby is opposed to pouring bleach in the pool but he is.
I ask this because I thought I read on one of the chlorine packages that you had to be careful mixing different chlorines or something. That is it will cause dangerous gases to come off the pool.
Maybe I'm confusing it with something else or possibly another chemical, I'll have to reread the package when I get home.![]()
In the water, chlorine is chlorine. Besides, liquid chlorine and bleach are the same thing--some of the pool store stuff is 12.5%, but a lot of them sell 6%--and that is IDENTICAL to Ultra bleach. 6% sodium hypchlorite solution--and the other 94% is salt-water.Originally Posted by Jaybird70
You don't pour liquid chlorine/bleach on pucks or powders, and you don't mix pucks and powders. All very dangerous. Once they are dissolved in the water they are fine together.
So use bleach, use liquid chlorine--it's all the same. I just suggest the carboys because of the CONVENIENCE of them. Show hubby a bottle of Liquid Chlorine 6% and a bottle of Ultra bleach 6% so he can see they are the same.
Carl
Thanks very much,
Went ahead and ended up getting the dry chlorine as I already had a bunch that I had already bought and opened. After a whole bunch, I now have my chlorine up to 15 ppm, took 52 oz of dry mix (3.5 oz raises 1ppm with the dry mix), but I have a kit that only measures chlorine and PH as Walmart was out of the others, I'm going to check another Walmart tomorrow.
I had my numbers checked by the pool place and they said that my PH was good. However I just check it it says 6.8, should I worry about the PH right now or should I go ahead and correct it. I realize now that I should have checked it first.
Pool is looking like a dark brownish green murky mess.Which I'm sure is good, no goop as far as I can tell.
Do yourself a favor: never accept "good" as a measure from a pool store. Have them give you a number. "good" doesn't mean anything without the value it describes.
Be careful your powdered chlorine doesn't raise your CYA too high. If it's Di-Chlor it will raise it too high before your conversion is complete. That's why bleach/LC is better. If it's cal-hypo, it will raise your calcium level very high very quickly AND can make the water cloudy. Again, that's why bleach/LC is better.
Carl
Bookmarks