Hi Char, and welcome to the forum!!!!
First off, let me tell you that maintaining your pool will be so much easier and cheaper this year than it could have been--you were very, very smart to avoid the Bacquacil products--for what you were going to spend on them, you could have a clean, clear chlorine pool for almost the whole year!! You were also smart to skip the Nature 2--they don't do much at all for maintaining safe water, and they add metals. If you don't yet know what a nightmare that can be, go to the Metals forum and read a few of the current posts!!!!
I suspect that what you're smelling in the water there is chloramines, not chlorine--some municipal systems use that for water sanitation (don't ask me how it works, I just know they do!!). Once your pool is properly balanced, you shouldn't have that smell.
The first and foremost thing I would buy is a good, drop-based test kit. They can be kind of pricey, but if you get the right one, it will test everything you ever would need to maintain your pool, and will save you its price hundredfold in money, time, aggravation, and lost pool time trying to recover from all the junk the pool stores try to sell you when you go in to have your water tested (and often give inaccurate results). We recommend the Taylor K-2006 or 2006C (it's the same kit, just with more reagents). You can reorder reagents separately if/when you run out. Two of the best online prices I've seen are at http://www.spspools-spas.com and http://www.amatoind.com. Leslie's pools also sometimes carry a relabeled version of the same kit. A good test kit is going to be in the top 3 absolute necessities if you're going to get the most out of your pool!
You're going to need some plain, unscented bleach (WalMart's Ultra generic is what I buy) or if you live in a state where 12.5 % liquid chlorine is sold, many other folks on this forum use that. Carl, one of the other mods, buys it by the carboy. You are also going to need some stabilizer, also sold at pool stores, WalMart, and sometimes Lowe's or Home Depot. It is sometimes labeled as "balancer", "conditioner", or "stabilizer", but if you'll look at the ingredient list, the main ingredient should be cyanuric or isocyanuric acid. You'll need somewhere around 3 lbs. I bought a 4-lb container of it this year in the spa section of WalMart's chemicals.
Two of the other commonly used items here are Borax, for raising pH, and baking soda for raising alkalinity. Don't buy those in pool quantities yet, though--because you may not need them. When you fill the pool, use your test kit to run a set of tests for chlorine (free, combined, and/or total), pH, and alkalinity. Don't bother to test for CYA or stabilizer, because it won't be there until you add it. You can test for calcium hardness if you want, but it really doesn't matter for a vinyl pool unless it's over 250 ppm or so. Might not be a bad idea just to get a baseline.
When you get your test kit, it wouldn't hurt to run a complete set of those tests (except for the CYA) on your fill water. I realize it'll be much the same as testing the newly filled pool, but it won't hurt to practice with the kit. Once you get a set of results, post them here and we can help you go from there.
You're gonna love having a pool!!
Janet
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