Since I'm being told that chorine kills the stuff, I'm surprised that this part of the forum is so active. Are problems encountered with algae primarily due to not maintaining proper levels?
Since I'm being told that chorine kills the stuff, I'm surprised that this part of the forum is so active. Are problems encountered with algae primarily due to not maintaining proper levels?
I add #3 - Mother Nature is messing with me2 kinds of folks are here for the most part
1) Help I'm at my wits end, can you teach me ?
2) I knew better but slacked and here we are
Life gets in the way for alot of folks. We had a member need to pause a SLAM while a child went for an emergency operation a week or so ago, it was a routine kinda thing, but still. It was a sobering reminder that there are way more important things sometimes. Go fix your kid OP, we can fix the pool in a few days !!!
Or folks get lazy. Lol.
Excellent add !!!! If extended rain hits while the pump isn’t circulating for 12-16 hours it can cause a bunch of headaches also.add #3 - Mother Nature is messing with me
with all the rains from Texas to Florida and up to the Northeast coupled with heat & humidity - I think this has caused some unwanted outbreaks in algae, especially for those that have kept their FC at the minimum
Mostly it is new people. They do not understand the relationship between Free Chlorine and Stabilizer. They listened to neighbors, to co-workers, pool builders, pool store employees and Crud they read on the internet (Irony!!!!).Since I'm being told that chorine kills the stuff, I'm surprised that this part of the forum is so active. Are problems encountered with algae primarily due to not maintaining proper levels?
Yeah...I was also one that started with chlorine BUT only followed pool store advice with using (only) granualr chlorine sticks. Liquid was never presented as an option to me. So nothing was ever explained to me about CYA, and chlorine lock (which is what I ran into but was told it was chlorine demand and that my only recourse was to add like 100 lbs of more granualr stuff. That's when I gave up on chlorine and went to baqua). Looking back on it, I got so much bad advice from that store. Now they don't even want to deal with me anymore (long story). That's fine. The feeling is mutual.They do not understand the relationship between Free Chlorine and Stabilizer.
So you had mold issues while using chlorine??t would be white mold and very high CYA that got me started with TFP!
Climate change (I guess you could say it's mother nature to some extent) is going to mess with all of us. Our weather patterns affect our pools and thus water chemistry.Mother Nature is messing with me
Actually, I have found rains, even heavy ones, don't affect the FC levels all that much. If anything, my SWG is set to provide enough chlorine for the hottest, sunniest summer days. When it is overcast or raining, my SWG is producing more chlorine than is needed and my FC inches up over those days.
If you look you rarely see pool stores pushing SWG. Would put them out of businessYeah...I was also one that started with chlorine BUT only followed pool store advice with using (only) granualr chlorine sticks. Liquid was never presented as an option to me. So nothing was ever explained to me about CYA, and chlorine lock (which is what I ran into but was told it was chlorine demand and that my only recourse was to add like 100 lbs of more granualr stuff. That's when I gave up on chlorine and went to baqua). Looking back on it, I got so much bad advice from that store. Now they don't even want to deal with me anymore (long story). That's fine. The feeling is mutual.
It is not just the rain. Many big storms causes debris to be put in pool so a combination of rain water, debris and as you stated, minimum FC levels is a recipe for algae. If you are not adjusting your SWCG output or adding LC directly after then that could trigger a bloom.Whenever I see a post that someone suddenly has an algae problem after rain it doesn't make any sense. I've never had that issue..ever. their fc levels were barely adequate to begin with, most likely.