Stains on the side along the water line are already back. I can live with some staining as long as the water is blue. Adding CYA to bring it up to 70 now. This PROTech CYA takes forever to dissolve. I'll be squeezing socks for days lol.
I'm not familiar with that brand. I usually just hit-up Walmart for their Clorox stabilizer (4-lb bottle). I fill a white tube sock, let it soak for about 15-20 minutes, and as soon as I squeeze it's going all over the place. Works really well. I keep saying I'm going to do a video of it just because I see so many people say they have a hard time getting their granules to dissolve. Not sure why unless it's something unique to that brand of stabilizer or has something to do with the water (too cold).This PROTech CYA takes forever to dissolve.
I'm not familiar with that brand. I usually just hit-up Walmart for their Clorox stabilizer (4-lb bottle). I fill a white tube sock, let it soak for about 15-20 minutes, and as soon as I squeeze it's going all over the place. Works really well. I keep saying I'm going to do a video of it just because I see so many people say they have a hard time getting their granules to dissolve. Not sure why unless it's something unique to that brand of stabilizer or has something to do with the water (too cold).
Research what it might take to truck in some metal free water?
That's all I can think of. I hope someone else has a better idea?
Did you ever get around to taking that water sample in to the pool store and asking for just a metals test??
Yeah, we normally don't ask folks to go there, but the metals tests are so expensive we don't want you to have to but it.
See exactly what's in the water and how much. Remind me again... is this city or well water??
Maddie![]()
Thank you for the reply, Dave. You are so right, I've been over testing. Being at home all the time, haha. I will try keeping polyfil in the skimmer and running FC at normal levels.First understand what is happening to your pool. You have been introducing chlorine into high-iron-content pool water. The chlorine oxidizes the soluble iron and it precipitates into visible yellowish particles. put those brownish-yellowish particles in blue pool water and you get clear green. We see it often and most always around this time of year.
If you simply run your FC at normal levels, the iron continues to precipitate out until there is little to no iron left and the pool clears. This is a multi-day process so I would suggest you stop bouncing around and just watch it happen. Polyfill in your skimmers will prove that it is working as you see them turn brownish.
I would also suggest you not test aso much.....this is a slow process and testing and posting like you are doing makes you "over control" just like a new driver steering a car.
How can you fix it? Remove the iron from that water before it gets in your pool with a whole house water softener. Use that water for your refills and you will not be adding any iron. It's also possible that, after it clears the initial iron, for reasons I can't explain, using the same source for refill doesn't seem to cause the issue as badly......I am not sure why.
Sand wouldn't do that. But if the pool company added any other gimmicks with copper or something, that could complicate things. As for the FC level, just balance it. You don't want algae. You've been lucky your water temp is still cool, but it's going to warm up fast. So keep the pH low, and the FC balanced with the CYA as noted on the FC/CYA Levels. As Dave said, give it some time to adjust. Chlorine is battling metals right now. Have some sequestrant ready as well.Could that have introduced iron?
Sand wouldn't do that. But if the pool company added any other gimmicks with copper or something, that could complicate things. As for the FC level, just balance it. You don't want algae. You've been lucky your water temp is still cool, but it's going to warm up fast. So keep the pH low, and the FC balanced with the CYA as noted on the FC/CYA Levels. As Dave said, give it some time to adjust. Chlorine is battling metals right now. Have some sequestrant ready as well.