frustratedpoolmom said:My advice, having been there done that with a skeptical hubby, is have him come on here and read the advice. He will convert. The experts here have a way with people![]()
I live in an area where water is very expensive. I hesitated draining, my CYA was 120+. But honestly you are fighting a losing battle if you don't get your CYA down, and a partial drain is the only way to do it.
I did 2 partial drains last May, got my CYA down to 60+ and my pool has been fine since. Once I got that under control I probably spent less than $35 the remainder of the season.
That is your best place to start and my only advice. Lower your CYA.
Hubby and I do not fight about the pool, once I took over and found TFP and converted BBB, he trusts me to handle it. Only time he gets involved is heavy equipment issues or putting on the winter cover.
Good luck, its a beautiful pool and once you get the algea under control you'll be a happy camper.
overit said:No need to reply to "What is Shock Level" having read and re-read some stickes, post, the caculator and things at the bottom of the "Caculator" I'm am thinking Shock Level means the level of FC in ratio to my CYA that will kill my alage and that this number is high and always changing. How long does a person need to keep it at this level (a day, a week, a month?) and if I slip up and it drops below this level for a few hours do you have to start all over again? Sorry I'm so slow, I feel like such a dumb dumb.
Will try to switch more water but was just wondering if I was thinking right.
overit said:No need to reply to "What is Shock Level" having read and re-read some stickes, post, the caculator and things at the bottom of the "Caculator" I'm am thinking Shock Level means the level of FC in ratio to my CYA that will kill my alage and that this number is high and always changing. How long does a person need to keep it at this level (a day, a week, a month?) and if I slip up and it drops below this level for a few hours do you have to start all over again? Sorry I'm so slow, I feel like such a dumb dumb.
Will try to switch more water but was just wondering if I was thinking right.
overit said:Well, we dumped and replaced over half the water (again), put in 14 gallons of bleach, ran the pump for 8 hours and the numbers are as follows:
FC 22.5
CC .5
PH 7.5
CYA 70
TA 140
CH 540
The CYA did not go down as low as I thought it might.
If I understand what I am reading in all your information, I need to get my FC to about 25, hold it there over night for 2 nights and that might kill off the black algae every where it is hiding. We are brushing and brushing and the algae is slowing fading but the stuff is hiding under our rock waterfall and in the cracks, places that I really can't get to to brush. Thinking maybe we should keep it at 25 for longer???
I am worried about the CYA creeping back up. I take it CYA is cyanuric acid. How does it get into the pool? if you never add cyanuric acid. Your stickies say stabilizer. My husband said he has never put any stabilizer in. I am so hoping this algae does not come back for a few years at least. I do want to leave the pool maintenace to the husband but am so tired of being sent to the pool supply store for more algaecide, shock and chlorine. The $$$$$$$ spent every other weekend was killing me. What to do next?