Quick background: I've never owned a pool or even lived in a house with a pool. Around September I moved into a new house with a pool. Within the first week the pool pump broke. I was fighting with a home warranty company (I had the equipment inspected prior to move in) and with lots of other moving stresses I just completed neglected the pool while having that fight. Around early February I finally felt like I needed to get the pool figured out and couldn't neglect it any longer.
I paid out of pocket to have the pump fixed. I cleaned the filter, brushed, vacuumed and repeated. The water actually looked pretty good. I pretty quickly learned I probably needed at least a partial drain due to high CH (800+) and CYA (203). I went ahead and did a full drain and refill. A few people had recommended the TFP community but I made the mistake of thinking I'd let the local pool store help me get everything in range and then takeover from there. I quickly realized that was taking me in expensive circles and bought a test kit and signed up here.
Reading here and just addressing one thing at a time, and rereading, searching, etc has been a huge help. I'm still using a few tabs until I get my CYA around 40 but otherwise I've just been using muriatic acid and liquid chlorine and testing at home. I'm feeling great about where I am with the water testing and cross referencing any questions here as far as the water chemistry goes. I think I'm ready to dive a little deeper.
One thing I'd like the ability to use is the spa heater. All of my equipment looks pretty old and I'm guessing the gas heater is from the late 90's when the pool was built. I'm hesitant to just fire it up and see what happens because how expensive my gas bills have already been and I don't want to accidentally heat the entire pool. Which takes me to another thing that has crossed my mind. I can't tell if the plaster in the spa just looks older due to being shallow and getting more sun, or if the water is more stagnant in there and I need to do something to cycle the water better in there.
In Feb I completely cleaned the filter and added the required amount of DE powder. I made a note of where the pressure gauge was reading when the pump was on high. Since then I've vacuumed out a good amount of debris, especially after we had a large mesquite removed but the pump pressure has not moved at all from where it was in February. Does this seem normal? It is a pretty large filter in my opinion. Since the pump was rebuilt I haven't programmed it and am just leaving it running on low full time. Every day I bump it up and hit Quick Clean for a few hours. Despite this the skimmer basket basically catches nothing and I have to vacuum out most of the debris. I've read a little bit about moving jets around but it's too cold for me to get in and I have no confidence in doing that successfully.
My last question at the moment is what, if any, equipment would you guys recommend to make my life easier? I was thinking of starting with one of those top skimmers to start. I don't mind a weekly vacuum but It's a pain to have to do that daily or if any guests are coming over. I currently have to manually push around the vacuum at the bottom. It can be time consuming. I don't want to spend a ton of money but I can probably talk myself into something if it will significantly make things easier on myself. Especially considering I'm saving money by not hiring anyone. I know this was a long post but hopefully it's appropriate for this section. I'll follow up with some pictures.
I paid out of pocket to have the pump fixed. I cleaned the filter, brushed, vacuumed and repeated. The water actually looked pretty good. I pretty quickly learned I probably needed at least a partial drain due to high CH (800+) and CYA (203). I went ahead and did a full drain and refill. A few people had recommended the TFP community but I made the mistake of thinking I'd let the local pool store help me get everything in range and then takeover from there. I quickly realized that was taking me in expensive circles and bought a test kit and signed up here.
Reading here and just addressing one thing at a time, and rereading, searching, etc has been a huge help. I'm still using a few tabs until I get my CYA around 40 but otherwise I've just been using muriatic acid and liquid chlorine and testing at home. I'm feeling great about where I am with the water testing and cross referencing any questions here as far as the water chemistry goes. I think I'm ready to dive a little deeper.
One thing I'd like the ability to use is the spa heater. All of my equipment looks pretty old and I'm guessing the gas heater is from the late 90's when the pool was built. I'm hesitant to just fire it up and see what happens because how expensive my gas bills have already been and I don't want to accidentally heat the entire pool. Which takes me to another thing that has crossed my mind. I can't tell if the plaster in the spa just looks older due to being shallow and getting more sun, or if the water is more stagnant in there and I need to do something to cycle the water better in there.
In Feb I completely cleaned the filter and added the required amount of DE powder. I made a note of where the pressure gauge was reading when the pump was on high. Since then I've vacuumed out a good amount of debris, especially after we had a large mesquite removed but the pump pressure has not moved at all from where it was in February. Does this seem normal? It is a pretty large filter in my opinion. Since the pump was rebuilt I haven't programmed it and am just leaving it running on low full time. Every day I bump it up and hit Quick Clean for a few hours. Despite this the skimmer basket basically catches nothing and I have to vacuum out most of the debris. I've read a little bit about moving jets around but it's too cold for me to get in and I have no confidence in doing that successfully.
My last question at the moment is what, if any, equipment would you guys recommend to make my life easier? I was thinking of starting with one of those top skimmers to start. I don't mind a weekly vacuum but It's a pain to have to do that daily or if any guests are coming over. I currently have to manually push around the vacuum at the bottom. It can be time consuming. I don't want to spend a ton of money but I can probably talk myself into something if it will significantly make things easier on myself. Especially considering I'm saving money by not hiring anyone. I know this was a long post but hopefully it's appropriate for this section. I'll follow up with some pictures.
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