Hi all -
Long time lurker, first post. I have a in-ground, salt-water, gunite pool, 8 years old, in Charlotte, NC. Discovered a crack in the bottom half of a Jandy CL340 filter tank yesterday with water spraying out at high pressure. Thought about trying to repair it, but the internet quickly revealed how bad of an idea that is. So, the pool is shut down and water is drained out of the filter housing. I'm in contact with a couple of repair places who are working on quotes and finding a replacement. It seems at the crawl speed that anyone can find parts and labor these day, my pool is going to be down for at least a couple of weeks. The water temp is 90 degrees and the water is crystal clear... has always been well balanced. FC is at about 2.0 right now, but I'm sure will be dropping quickly in our Carolina sun. Is there a best practice for situations like this in terms of maintaining water chemistry or is my best bet to just not worry about it and reset everything after the pool can run again? It's ~20k gallons with attached, elevated hot tub w/ spillover waterfall. I've thought about adding some liquid chlorine and algecide and trying to stir it up bit with pool brush / hand skimmer, but that's obviously a poor replacement for a filter pump.
Thanks for any words of advice.
Tom
Long time lurker, first post. I have a in-ground, salt-water, gunite pool, 8 years old, in Charlotte, NC. Discovered a crack in the bottom half of a Jandy CL340 filter tank yesterday with water spraying out at high pressure. Thought about trying to repair it, but the internet quickly revealed how bad of an idea that is. So, the pool is shut down and water is drained out of the filter housing. I'm in contact with a couple of repair places who are working on quotes and finding a replacement. It seems at the crawl speed that anyone can find parts and labor these day, my pool is going to be down for at least a couple of weeks. The water temp is 90 degrees and the water is crystal clear... has always been well balanced. FC is at about 2.0 right now, but I'm sure will be dropping quickly in our Carolina sun. Is there a best practice for situations like this in terms of maintaining water chemistry or is my best bet to just not worry about it and reset everything after the pool can run again? It's ~20k gallons with attached, elevated hot tub w/ spillover waterfall. I've thought about adding some liquid chlorine and algecide and trying to stir it up bit with pool brush / hand skimmer, but that's obviously a poor replacement for a filter pump.
Thanks for any words of advice.
Tom