I had the same problem last year with finding "stuff" on the bottom of my pool after changing over from cal-hypo to bleach. I eventually took a turkey baster to the bottom of the pool and sucked it out to see if I could figure out what it was. I let it sit overnight in a small glass to let the stuff settle out. In the morning I strained the particles a coffee filter. I too feared a cracked lateral. What I found was that it wasn't sand at all, but dead algae. I took it to work with me and verified this under a microscope. The pool was crystal clear, passed the OCLT, but must of been close to forming algae.
I did the deep cleaning of the filter, that can be found on this site. I was amazed the junk that came out of the filter. I didn't replace the sand in the filter because sand has been on the beaches for millions of years, so it hasn't gone bad in my filter in 6 short years?!?! Put the filter back together, turned it on, and away I went.
I did what I would call a "modified SLAM". I rose the pool to SLAM level, even though I had passed all 3 criteria to stop a SLAM. I kept it there for the better part of 5 days to insure there wasn't a nascent algae bloom starting. I can report that I haven't found sediment on the bottom since. Was it the filter needing cleaning, or was it nascent algae forming.....I don't know....but its done and over....Hope that helps you out....At the beginning of every pool season from now on, I will be doing the deep cleaning of my sand filter....Best of Luck...
Thank you so much. Sadly no lights, but the "pool experts" "opened" our pool for $300. This included throwing in shock to our swamp and installing the ladders. WHY WOULD YOU INSTALL LADDERS INTO A SWAMP?????????? We took them completely apart and they are sitting at the bottom of the shallow end in the slammed water. We had hardly any today grow back. I am convinced we have one more day of slam and we will have truly defeated the green monsters and the stupid pool store.If you have a light, it wouldn't be a bad idea to pop it out and clean behind it also. Every little nook and cranny need to be clean.
Good luck.
I'm sorry to break this to you, but it doesn't sound like you're fulfilling all 3 criteria to end the SLAM.We had hardly any today grow back. I am convinced we have one more day of slam and we will have truly defeated the green monsters and the stupid pool store.
Hey Jeni,
I know I'm a little late to the party, but I did see something I wanted to point out.
In post #29 you listed FC as 14.2 and later talked about running out of reagent.
Read the extended instructions for the Taylor 2006. You can use a 10ml sample, then divide total drops by .5 for FC. This will save on reagent.
I'm sorry to break this to you, but it doesn't sound like you're fulfilling all 3 criteria to end the SLAM.
You end SLAM when 1) the water is clear 2) you lose less than 1PPM FC overnight at SLAM levels 3) CC<0.5.
Also, I'd advise you to remove the ladders from the pool and scrub them down with a 1:1 mixture household bleach and water. Ladders tend to be good hiding spots for algae and it's easier to scrub them down out of the water.
So glad my husband is here. Took out all the sand, which is the WRONG kind of sand, and there are holes in the upright pvc pipe (the stand pipe?) that holds the laterals. Sand and junk is entering there and going back into the pool. It was very easy to vacuum up out the old sand. He is headed to the pool store now to see if we can get a new lateral unit. The gunk in the filter was unbelievable. Really looks like green vile gunk all over the sand. Trying to decide if we should put some pea gravel at the bottom under the sand. May just do that as they are $3.50 a bag, and I had to pay $12 at the hardware store for the sand. Nobody has silica sand here (not lowes, HD, Wallyworld, etc). It's a process this pool thing!
Thanks DM. We could not get the part for our old filter (new standpipe) so my husband got underwater epoxy putter to patch the holes. This was clearly the issue. It was so hard to tell if it was sand, algae, pollen, MA, etc. I just could not attempt the filter clean out without the help of my dear husband. The filter has the proper sand in it. They had used some type of coarse playground sand. Much coarser than the #20 recommended.It stinks that you are going through all this now, but don't let that get you down. Without finding your broken pipe, you could have been chasing your tail for a while before discovering this problem.
I cannot comment on the pea gravel, but I would do what the filter recommends.
Once you get that filtering issue fixed, it should be smooth sailing. You seem to have the "chemistry" end figured out, which is usually the hardest thing for people.
I had the same thing last year with my ladder. Its a heavy plastic with tons of small holes in it. Water must have got in there. I yanked it out after issues with passing my OCLT. I found a one inch drain hole in the ladder, and booooom, nasty green water drained out. Mixed a 1:1 mix of water to bleach and poured in the drain hole....no more issues...
Let us know what you come up with for your filter fix and sand.... Best of luck....don't let it defeat you....playing in a pool is too much fun....soon you will be bored because the only thing you will be doing is a five minute test of pH and chlorine![]()
Those parts can be found on Amazon or eBay.
Thanks kimkats! My poor husband thought perhaps he broke the laterals or the standpipe fix did not hold up, but correct it is not the nice white sand we now have. Definitely not.I hate to say it but maybe one of the holes opened back up? BUT that does not explain why it is brown when you sand is white. What a pain!
I wish I were closer so I could vacuum for you a time or two!
Kim