A couple of observations:
first copper usually does not react well to ascorbic acid, especially the BROWN copper stains (the blue ones might but the bronw, grey and black usually won't).
second, you said you are on well water. Have you tested it for iron? I suspect that you have iron staining from your well!
I also suspect that the reason your copper levels are so high are linked to your use of trichlor.
first, is your clorinator before of after your heater? It should be after. If it is before it explains the high copper levels.
If it is after it means you have not been keeping tabs on your TA and pH because the only reason so much copper would dissolve is because your water was too acidic. This is fairly common with trichlor use.
Finally, even forgetting that your CYA is way too high YOU NEED TO DRAIN THAT POOL AND REFILL BECAUSE YOU HAVE 5 PPM COPPER IN THE WATER. THAT IS WAY TOO HIGH TO BE SWIMMING IN AND IT IS NOT HEALTHY. COPPER IS TOXIC, THAT IS WHY IT IS USED AS AN AGACIDE AND YOU HAVE ABOUT 16 TIMES THE ALGAESTATIC LEVEL IN YOUR WATER!!!
ANYTHING ABOUT 1 PPM IS TOO HIGH!
sorry for shouting but you really need to pay attention to that.
bite the bullet, drain and refill and treat your well water for the iron that I suspect actually caused your staining.

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Waterbear is right, drain and refill. You may have other metals in your fill water, but they can be controlled with sequestering agent. You have to check the trichlor - a lot of it has copper in it now - it is used as an algaecide. Also with the trichlor it makes the water very acidic which can eat the copper element in a pool heater. Brown stains are ususally iron, which is very common in well water.
It does sound like you may be getting the metals through the air. It does sound like iron. I think you will have to use a lot of sequestering agent - putting some in every week to maintain what is lost through backwashing and dilution. Is there a municipal water testing place you can take your water to? It can give you a more detailed list of what metals are in the water. I wouldn't trust a pool store that said you had a copper level of 5 and didn't say anything to you. You can live with a little staining, but a copper level of 5 would not be advised. If you are going to get one more year out of your liner, then just use the sequestering agent, and keep up with the stain with a little ascorbic acid every now and then. Just be sure to check out the copper. You also must keep an eye on the ph - ascorbic acid will lower the ph too.
mwb
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