Anyone ever seen this Costco gadget ? I was researching chlorine prices the other day and found this. I thought it was interesting and wondered if anyone on here has any experience with something like this.
I read how the product works. You're supposed to use it in addition to a small amount of chlorine. The entire point of the product is to reduce the amount of chlorine used.That uses copper ions.
Yes, copper is a great algaecide. But it doesn't work fast enough to sanitize water for swimmers, which is why it is not approved as a pool sanitizer. You'd still need residual chlorine, which automatically keeps the algae at bay. I could see using that if you like metal stains on the pool walls and green-haired kids. See Alternative sanitizers and "chemical free" pools--The Truth!
No. I have concerns about the inconveniences of using liquid chlorine. I was trying to find a service (like Amazon) that delivers liquid chlorine regularly. So I was searching websites to see who had what and ran into the above mention product during my search.You won't find users here in all likelihood because of the reasons stated above. Prior users more likely, who have had issues and then came here for time-honored solutions based in science.
There is no reason to reduce chlorine usage below the correct level based on your CYA (stabilizer). FC/CYA Levels You may be familiar with public pools and that "chlorine" smell, which you associate with too much chlorine. That's not chlorine. It's the stuff that's formed after chlorine has done its job (CC's - combined chloramines), which have yet to be oxidized by the sun.
Do you have concerns about using a proper level of sanitizer? There is no proper lower level than in the chart linked above. Only dangerously low levels of sanitizer.
I checked out HASA yesterday. It's about 10 miles away. However, their website doesn't list a facility in AZ. The info I got was from MapQuest, via Google.I am going to guess in Phoenix, during June through much of September, your 28000 gallon pool will need about one gallon of 10% liquid chlorine each day. If you have your CYA at 50-60 ppm. More if you keep the CYA less than that.
You should be able to get into a mode of adding a gallon each day without testing. Test twice or three times a week, once you confirm that FC consumption.
I do believe some pool stores in the Phoenix area market bulk chlorine in reusable containers. Check that out. One I believe is called HASA.
I just looked at their website. I like what I see so far! However the closet location to me is 9 miles away in Old Town. I just got 5cs of chlorine but when I run out it's worth a trip. Thanks!Cactus, give A&M corsons pool supply a call, they’re all over the valley.
I keep all the pool stuff in our laundry room too. Did you know that Walmart's prices vary by location? Unfortunately, the nearest one to me is technically Scottsdale so the prices are high. When you buy in "bulk" at HD, the price came out to $2.something.I buy the 2 pack from Walmart, you could stock up on those, and just store them indoors too. I keep several cases in my laundry room where it stays cool.
In July & August, I use a quart a day of 10%, so figure for your 28k gallon pool, you’ll use around 3 quarts a day in the summer.![]()
I read how the product works. You're supposed to use it in addition to a small amount of chlorine. The entire point of the product is to reduce the amount of chlorine used.
Like I said just wondering if anyone has used this..
It's a total pain!!! I searched everywhere for an auto service to deliver chlorine. I'm really sad Amazon doesn't have that! If someone made one they would make a ton of money from it. So far the cheapest I found was HD, they drop the price a bit if you buy four or more.I had a similar one floating in my pool for about a month. I didn't notice much difference in water clarity. As the copper ionizes, it forms a buildup on the copper block, and every so often you have to take it out of the pool and scrub it with a metal brush to remove the buildup. When I took mine out of the pool to scrub it, some of the water from it dripped onto my decking and stained it green. (Also, my hands, though that goes away eventually.) It wasn't in my pool long enough to do that to my pool (that I've seen yet) but I'd imagine it would eventually. I returned mine - especially since I got 20+ gallons of chlorine for the same price. I'd agree with everyone else not to use it.
I plan to make about a trip a month to HD/Lowes for chlorine, since the chlorine shouldn't have a problem keeping (especially indoors) for that long. It is kind of a pain. I'm waffling on whether it's enough of a pain to get a salt water generator and just make my own chlorine on-site.
It's a total pain!!! I searched everywhere for an auto service to deliver chlorine. I'm really sad Amazon doesn't have that! If someone made one they would make a ton of money from it. So far the cheapest I found was HD, they drop the price a bit if you buy four or more.