frustratedpoolmom said:whowouldfigga said:Good morning.
Tested the water at 6.00am FC level went down to 27.5 WOW!
Brushed the pool added chlorine.
Down from what?
oops
Down from 40
frustratedpoolmom said:whowouldfigga said:Good morning.
Tested the water at 6.00am FC level went down to 27.5 WOW!
Brushed the pool added chlorine.
Down from what?
Well I do work in a pool store and I can tell you why they did not agree, they are not able to sell you all the copper or bromine or trichlor based 'black algae treatments'.whowouldfigga said:I went to the pool store today to buy more chlorine and the pool store employee did not agree with my methods or chemicals. After I get this resolved I will elaborate further.
Thanks for the help gals / guys.
JasonLion said:The daytime loss is from sunlight and is to be expected. The overnight loss means there is a substantial organic load, presumably algae, consuming chlorine. Hopefully your overnight loss tonight will be much smaller.
waterbear said:Well I do work in a pool store and I can tell you why they did not agree, they are not able to sell you all the copper or bromine or trichlor based 'black algae treatments'.Tell them that you are following the advice of another pool store that also does commercial pool maintenance.
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whowouldfigga said:I have been running my pump for 21 hours a day since Sunday night when I started shocking the pool. When should I cut back on my filtration time?
That does not really apply to black algae. Keep the FC up and the cirulation going until the black algae is all gone for a 24 hour period and then let your FC drop and the circulation return to normal.frustratedpoolmom said:whowouldfigga said:I have been running my pump for 21 hours a day since Sunday night when I started shocking the pool. When should I cut back on my filtration time?
When you're done shocking, your FC is holding, your water is clear. Then you should reduce your filtering time.
whowouldfigga said:Saturday. 08/16/2008
New Development.
My neighbors dog, a huge German Shepard that is about 80lbs is swimming in the pool. I was not aware of this. My neighbors and I are on good terms. Their dog is old and protects my very submissive dog. He deserves a good cool off during the day. Luckily my dog thinks he is nuts and will not follow. Guess I have a new twist in my pool care. I will post a separate thread for this issue.
Keeping a eye on TS Fay...
duraleigh said:High FC really messes up the pH test. Simply disregard that test until your FC gets down somewhere around 10ppm and that test will become accurate again.
Dogs in the pool is pretty commonplace and, aside from the extra hair in the skimmer basket, seems to cause no other problems. I never thought I would allow a dog in the pool but we rescued a Border Collie/Black Lab mix and she is obsessed with fetching a ball from the pool. She can easily leap 15 feet out into the pool (I'll post a pic up soon) and is great entertainment for everyone.....I've learned to deal with it. :lol: