Moved states, first pool.

trisen23

Gold Supporter
Jun 27, 2024
3
Ridgeley, WV
Pool Size
25000
Surface
Vinyl
Chlorine
Liquid Chlorine
We moved to Northeast West Virginia (it still makes me laugh to say that), and the house had a pool covered in a green cover anchored to concrete. Removing the cover revealed a dark green opaque mess in mid-June. I’ve never owned a pool; the previous owner said they usually use about 12 lbs of shock. I spent a couple of days learning the plumbing, pump, etc., and I started to add shock. It started to clear slowly, but not by much. The internet searches began, and I bought a test kit that only measured Chlorine to 5ppm and had enough to check CYA twice. Staring down the tube, trying to figure out if I could see the dot, I thought, “This can’t be right. There aren’t numbers that far down the tube.” My best guess is that the CYA was well over 200, which I now think would be unsurprising if they kept throwing shock powder at it.

Cycle draining the pool with the skimmer alone took a while, as there was no floor drain. Thankfully, there is a second well just for the pool. Even running on off cycles with the water would eventually get silty brown water. A week later, I got a light green, slightly cloudy pool, but I could see the bottom.

I had a bottle of Clorox algaecide, and still being a noob, I thought, "Oh, this will probably help," and it did… sort of…

It became a blueish, mostly clear pool, but the chlorine levels were down… so I added more chlorine. I’m sure some of you are shaking your head and laughing. The way I would describe the color was Statue of Liberty green. I should have just returned to Trouble Free Pool, but no, I had dumped copper algaecide in my pool and then oxidized it with chlorine. I reached for the Clorox stain metal and scale but did not open it. I did SLAM instead and then vacuumed the floor as the metal fell out of suspension twice daily. The pool started turning blueish again, and I returned to Trouble Free Pool and read some more. I ran across a post about polyfill and iron, picked some up, and packed the skimmer baskets full. I kept checking them every few minutes at first, imagining polyfill getting sucked through the basket into the pump, but it stayed, and so I waited. The following day, I pulled the polyfill out, and it was dark rusty brown in both skimmers, but the pool was finally blue.

My total alkalinity is still a bit high, so I need to lower the pH and aerate, but it’s swimmable, and looking at the clear blue pool makes me smile.

I expect to make many more mistakes, but I could not have done this without this site and the community that holds it together. I just wanted to say thank you to all of you.

-Trisen
 
Ordered the TF-Pro Thursday and it gets here tomorrow. Thanks for the list of test to do. There is a salt chlorine generator on the pool. The cell is still in line but I was told that it doesn’t work. It does read low salt at the panel. Any idea if there is a way to check if it does work?
 
Any idea if there is a way to check if it does work?
If you have a local pool store/service company that sells that brand, they may have testing capabilities.

The other way to test is to raise the Salt level in the pool and fire it up. You need a K-1766 or TFTESTKITS.net salt test. Test the current salt level before you raise the salt level.