I just wanted to welcome you and also suggest the seasonal pool guide mentioned above. The biggest problem with classic pool store advice for a seasonal pool is the excessive use of stabilized chlorine products that send your CYA sky high making your chlorine less and less effective which then requires more and more expensive pool store potions to keep things in check, water gets worse and worse as the season goes along, and eventually you have to dump it, hopefully you make it to the end of the season first. By contrast our seasonal pool guide works on the concept of starting off with a known amount of CYA stabilizer in the water and from then on not adding any other stabilized chlorine product throughout the rest of the season, which lets you concentrate on just maintaining your Free Chlorine level and your pH. (if you get a lot of splash out or overflow you may need to make an educated guess and add a bit more CYA stabilizer mid season).
As to those products, if it is a cheap algaecide it likely contains copper which can cause staining, and tends to make blond hair turn green, so I would suggest avoiding using it. Clarifier is often another trouble spot, more often causing more problems than it cures, The stain away may be helpful if your well water contains iron (tends to make water turn yellow/brown at elevated chlorine levels, although I would probably hold off adding it unless you see a clear green tint to the water after you add chlorine yellow water, plus blue pool liner makes it look emerald green), the sorb sponge may also be helpful to use given the stock Intex filter is woefully undersized. I would probably skip the shock and the pool care pods as they likely contain stabilized chlorine and other stuff you don't need / want.
I hope this helps
Ike
p.s. looks like the pods contain phosphate remover, which is mostly another pool store snake oil product you don't need.
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I just wanted to welcome you and also suggest the seasonal pool guide mentioned above. The biggest problem with classic pool store advice for a seasonal pool is the excessive use of stabilized chlorine products that send your CYA sky high making your chlorine less and less effective which then requires more and more expensive pool store potions to keep things in check, water gets worse and worse as the season goes along, and eventually you have to dump it, hopefully you make it to the end of the season first. By contrast our seasonal pool guide works on the concept of starting off with a known amount of CYA stabilizer in the water and from then on not adding any other stabilized chlorine product throughout the rest of the season, which lets you concentrate on just maintaining your Free Chlorine level and your pH. (if you get a lot of splash out or overflow you may need to make an educated guess and add a bit more CYA stabilizer mid season).
As to those products, if it is a cheap algaecide it likely contains copper which can cause staining, and tends to make blond hair turn green, so I would suggest avoiding using it. Clarifier is often another trouble spot, more often causing more problems than it cures, The stain away may be helpful if your well water contains iron (tends to make water turn yellow/brown at elevated chlorine levels, although I would probably hold off adding it unless you see a clear green tint to the water after you add chlorine yellow water, plus blue pool liner makes it look emerald green), the sorb sponge may also be helpful to use given the stock Intex filter is woefully undersized. I would probably skip the shock and the pool care pods as they likely contain stabilized chlorine and other stuff you don't need / want.
I hope this helps
Ike
p.s. looks like the pods contain phosphate remover, which is mostly another pool store snake oil product you don't need.