- Jan 4, 2016
- 5,392
- Pool Size
- 44000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
If you maintain, maintain, maintain, I'll bet your hard work on the cover will pay off and you'll be done, but yep, Caco's right, SLAMS are very hard to predict.
If you do get there, it will useful to remember your pump run time and SWC % from back when the pool was fairly new. You could set it at those levels and FC should be fine, or perhaps a bit extra to be on the safe side. If that info is completely unavailable, I can suggest hours and percentage based on volume and the chlorinator, and then we can add some to be on the safe side.
You could also lower pH to 7.4, and there would be nothing worth worrying about for 4 days.
Caco's suggestions are all good if the SLAM is still on. The only adjustment might be if you want anyone to be able to swim while you're not there. If so, you'd keep FC under SLAM shock level, and resume the SLAM when you get back. Nothing that can't be accommodated when it comes to summer fun and cooling off through this heat wave!
If you do get there, it will useful to remember your pump run time and SWC % from back when the pool was fairly new. You could set it at those levels and FC should be fine, or perhaps a bit extra to be on the safe side. If that info is completely unavailable, I can suggest hours and percentage based on volume and the chlorinator, and then we can add some to be on the safe side.
You could also lower pH to 7.4, and there would be nothing worth worrying about for 4 days.
Caco's suggestions are all good if the SLAM is still on. The only adjustment might be if you want anyone to be able to swim while you're not there. If so, you'd keep FC under SLAM shock level, and resume the SLAM when you get back. Nothing that can't be accommodated when it comes to summer fun and cooling off through this heat wave!