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    joecus is offline Lifetime Member Thread Analyst joecus 0
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    Default Re: I'm in big trouble - I turned water green

    10 minutes since my last reply, the water totally clear again. Something in the algicide is reacting with the shock. However, not the chlorine. Please help.

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    Default Re: I'm in big trouble - I turned water green

    I do not know what is going on with the green water/bromide thing. But, I can tell you that you must get your pH up ASAP. Any readings below 7.0 are acidic and will damage your pool. You can use some 20 Mule Team Borax to raise your pH. Look for it in the laundry aisle at Walmart. Can't suggest how much because I don't know the volume of your pool. Also, what type of pool is it?

    I doubt that your alk is 0. Pool stores often give inaccurate readings. That is why we suggest buying a good test kit like the Taylor K-2006 so you can do your own tests. If it is, you can raise it with some baking soda.

    Is this a newly filled pool? You have no cya in there and that is one reason (in addition to the algae/green pool mess) that is causing you to lose chlorine so fast. The dichlor is stabilized which means it has cya in it, so if you continue to use it, your cya will rise. We like 30-50ppm for cya. You might just want to use bleach for your chlorine right now. It won't contribute to any cloudy water problems. If you want to use dichlor later after you get this all cleared up, that is fine. (As long as you monitor the cya level and don't let it get too high because that creates a whole different problem.)

    Right now, the most critical problem you have is the low pH. Must get it up ASAP. Also, more chlorine. Like Ben noted above, it is probably going to take a lot of chlorine over a period of time to rid the pool of the bromide/bromine.

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    joecus is offline Lifetime Member Thread Analyst joecus 0
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    Default Re: I'm in big trouble - I turned water green

    I just had the water tested for copper. It came back with a positive reading of 1.7. According to the local pool store, that's why my water turns green when I add shock. Does that make sense? He sold me something called pool magnet plus. He said the algicide probably contained copper. I looked at the ingredients of the algicide and it was not listed but did have 51% OF "Inert ingredients". Any suggestions on the removal of copper? I am working on getting the PH up. I added 6lbs of baking soda. How long do I need to wait to retest PH?

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    Default Re: I'm in big trouble - I turned water green

    I'll let Pool Doc or Marie talk to you about the copper issue. But, just wanted to tell you that baking soda is used to raise alk, not pH. You need Borax to raise pH. Wait a couple of hours before retesting. If you are dealing with a metals problem you'll want your pH to be no higher than 7.4 and probably 7.2 is better.

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    joecus is offline Lifetime Member Thread Analyst joecus 0
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    Default Re: I'm in big trouble - I turned water green

    Won't the baking soda raise both the ph and alkalinity?

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    Default Re: I'm in big trouble - I turned water green

    Washing Soda raises both PH & Alk. Baking Soda only raises Alkalinity. But in your case it may be you don't want your PH going up right now, so hold off until Marie can respond about the copper.
    Evan S.

    AG FastLane Pool, 9x13 ~ 3,000 gal, COVERED/INSULATED 23X7, 30 gpm water pump (runs 12 hrs a day) AND a Hayward Power-Flo LX 1.5 hp Pump (only used on occasion for the pool sweep), Hayward 100K BTU Heater, Waterway Flo-Pro Skim Filter & Slime Bag, no other filters

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    Default Re: I'm in big trouble - I turned water green

    No, he needs to bring his pH up. Early this afternoon, he posted that his pH was 6.2. That is dangerously low. I'm not sure how he got that reading since most testers won't register anything lower than 6.8, but nevertheless, he needs to be bringing it up to at least 7.0. As I said above, since there is a metals issue, he wants to keep pH on the low end of normal -- 7.4 or lower and probably 7.2 is better but he definitely MUST get it above 7.0 ASAP or risk damage to his pool.

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    Default Re: I'm in big trouble - I turned water green

    Hi Joe;

    First things first . . . unfortunately, you've got several first things.

    => pH, chlorine, copper

    FIRST:
    Get a CHEAP drops test kit -- the kind that turns yellow for chlorine, and yellow to purple for pH, and test your pool. We need to know if your 6.2 pH reading is real, or bogus. Some pool stores might be able to test for pH; in others it's just going to be a bogus reading. I'd like to see YOUR readings, to either confirm or repudiate the pool store readings.

    Verify that your pH is actually very low (yellow on the drops kit -- but don't confuse OTO drops (yellow = chlorine present) with phenol red drops (yellow = low pH). Don't test pH if the OTO drops turn orange: the chlorine / bromine is too high for phenol red to work well.

    SECOND:
    Dose with 1/2 gallon of bleach each evening, simply to maintain sanitation control a way least likely to conflict with anything else.


    THIRD:
    Assuming the pH is low, gradually start raising it, using 1/2 box of borax per 10K gallons, added every few hours. If you have a pump timer, disable it, and run your pump & filter 24/7.

    FOURTH:
    Answer some questions:
    => Do you have a heater?
    => Have you added any algicide, recently or last fall? What kind?
    => Do you have a Nature2, 'mineral' or any other gizmo that might contain or add copper.

    FIFTH:
    Do the fingernail scrape test I described, and include the results from that.

    SIXTH:
    Post your info, after you've collected it. Post the pH as soon as you've confirmed it -- if your pH is REALLY that low, and the color was yellowish-brownish-greenish, I know what it is.


    PoolDoc

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    joecus is offline Lifetime Member Thread Analyst joecus 0
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    Default Re: I'm in big trouble - I turned water green

    Thanks -
    first - the 6.2 ph reading came from my local pool store. I have both the strips and the tester that you add yellow and red drops. I just took the strip reading, showing ultra low ph. The drop tester turns water yellowish when I add the red drops indicating a very lowph. I will work first on getting the PH up.

    second - I did the bleach
    third - I am running the filter 24/7 and will add borax (1/2 box ? what size box?)
    forth - I'm sure the copper came from the Algicide I added since this is when the water started to change color to greenish/yellow upon adding shock. Like I said, the water quickly turns back to clear. I do have a heater. The copper reading of 1.7 also came from my local store.

    fifth - I did the fingernail test on the black spots and it does dissipate.

    So, tomorrow I will work on getting the ph up using the borax, correct? Don't add the backing soda yet, correct? What about the alkalinity, don't worry yet? Is there a reason you don't want me to raise both ph and alkalinity at same time using baking soda? Lastly, what do I do about copper? Thanks a million, again. Did I forget anything?

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    joecus is offline Lifetime Member Thread Analyst joecus 0
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    Default Re: I'm in big trouble - I turned water green

    Sorry - I forgot to mention, I'm was using the Arm and Hammer baking soda instructions on how to raise the PH and Alkalinity. I bought this 12 lb bag at Costco and it has specific instructions for raising both. I'm not sure why some people are saying washing soda instead of backing soda.

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