Best way to reduce chlorine level

May 1, 2008
12
A week ago, I shocked my pool after having a pool party for my son.

For the last week it has only rained and very little with very little sunshine. I've kept my pool covered and ran the pump and SWG for 10 hours a day.

Today, I tested my water and my TC is well in excess of 10. When I added the yellow OTO drops, the water turned red!!!

What is the best way to reduce the chlorine level? I think I will simply leave the cover off, turn the SWG off and let the sun do its magic until the levels reduce.

Can anyone suggest any other tips?

Thanks.
 
And OTO only test total chlorine which is how much is combined and free together. If the Free is only 5 and total is 10, you need to bring up the free to 50 or use MPS to get rid of the combined. If it happens again the next day with little or no usage,, something is going on like phosphates and a water change is in your future.

Scott
 
It's way high - turns dark yellowish orange on one drop on an OTO test and is well over 10 ppm on a DPD (didn't want to use up all my drops to figure it out exactly). CYA is also near zero. This is a covered hot tub.

Nothing strange going on - neighbor put an extra cup and a half of bleach in the hot tub while we were away.

Jack's Magic makes a chlorine neutralizer - there's some non-pool product you can use as well, just wondering if anyone knows what it is.
 
I don't think there is much Combined Chlorine (CC) in this situation. It's the Free Chlorine (FC) that is excessively high due to running the SWG when there wasn't much sun and the water was cool so chlorine usage was very low.

I would suggest first turning off the SWG if you have not already done so. As for lowering the chlorine level in a hurry, either in a pool or in a spa, one can use a chlorine neutralizer (sodium thiosulfate). Alternatively, you can use hydrogen peroxide (especially for the spa since the quantities are far lower) where a 3% hydrogen peroxide solution neutralizes approximately the same volume of 6% bleach. So to neutralize 10 ppm FC in 10,000 gallons, it would take around 26 cups (1.6 gallons) of 3% hydrogen peroxide in 10,000 gallons or about 1 cup in 350 gallons. You can get stronger hydrogen peroxide for the pool, though usually one just uses sodium thiosulfate instead at a rough rate of 2.6 ounces weight of sodium thiosulfate to lower 1 ppm FC in 10,000 gallons.
 
Thiosulfate wipes out chlorine too. I use it just before dumping a pool for service. Keeps the EPA and NJDEP off my back. They don't like it when 20K+ gallons of chlorinated water gets dumped in the sewer. Something about causing fish kills makes the environmentalists get upset. I wonder why? :roll:

Scott
 

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The dosage for sodium metabisulfite is around 1.5 ounces (weight) per 10,000 gallons for a 1 ppm FC reduction. For sodium sulfite (another alternative) it's 2.4 ounces and as I mentioned above, for sodium thiosulfate it's 2.6 ounces. You should add about half the required amount and then retest after an hour of circulation. These amounts are approximate since multiple chemical reactions can occur depending on the pH and mixing conditions.
 
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