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  1. #1
    prh129 is offline Lifetime Member Widget Weaver prh129 0
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    Default Re: Chlorine-red eyes

    Before adding anything, you need to test your water to see where you are at. A drops-based test kit will give you the readings you need (there is one that you can purchase from the main site - poolsolutions.com). Test your water and post your readings and you will get the recommendations you need to bring your water up to snuff.

    Peter

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    PoolDoc is offline Administrator Quark Inspector PoolDoc 5 stars PoolDoc 5 stars PoolDoc 5 stars PoolDoc 5 stars PoolDoc 5 stars PoolDoc 5 stars PoolDoc 5 stars
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    Exclamation Re: Chlorine-red eyes

    My experience is that eye irritation is caused by the following, from most irritating to least:
    1. chloramines
    2. fresh (ie, non-salty) water
    3. excessively low or high pH, especially low pH
    4. linear quats
    5. chlorine below 10 ppm in a stabilized pool
    You need to start with a plain chlorinated pool. It's much easier to go from a plain chlorinated pool, to any other type, than it is to come BACK to chlorine.

    Get that pool chemistry right, and then see if the eye irritation is at an acceptable level, or not.

    If not, add enough salt to raise the salinity to about 3,000 ppm (about what folks on SWG's are running) and see if that helps. If it does, you can consider whether you'd be willing to go to 9,000 ppm, which is about what's in eye saline or tears.

    If neither of those work, you only other real option is Baquacil. But of course, you'll be using linear quats, which will be somewhat irritating after you add a dose.

    For what it's worth, my experience has been that about 90% of those with irritation problems find that they are reduced to acceptable levels, if they will learn to operate the pool properly with chlorine.

    Ben
    "PoolDoc"

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