And possibly old water.....
Great site, thanks in advance for the brain power.
Recently we bought a custom home built in 1950 which has an older rectangular 30,000 gallon concrete/plaster pool that was resurfaced with fiberglass 7 years ago.
It has a Pentair48 diatomaceous earth filter and supposedly a copper return line but this is not verified yet. I have replaced the grids and purchased a suction side Rebel sweeper with an inline leaf canister. I remove debris from the surface daily with a leaf net and the water is clear and water temps are approaching the high 80's.
I ran water tests to the local pool supply but had varied results coupled with bad advice and misspent money on my behalf, oh well.
I stepped up and upgraded my test kit to a Taylor K2006 and the numbers were as follows:
Free Cl 1.4 (morning test with night treatment)
Combined Cl .6
pH 7.4
TA 130
Ca Hardness 325
CYA 160
Previous owner and hired pool guy used trichlor tabs in a floater.
I have released the pool guy and use 10% bleach from Home Depot and upped the nightly rate to 1 gallon from the 80 ounces I started with. The pool will use half the chlorine over night it seems.
I found the pool math calculator and have determined I need to drain my pool 80% to get my CYA levels down. My recommended free Cl level calculated to a minimum 11 with a liquid chlorine requirement at over 2.5 gallons. Ouch $6.50+ a day for a minimum level free Cl and no possibility of a SLAM. I do intend to add the 2.6 gallons after sunset tonight and monitor the Chlorine so I will update this post. I also will begin to research the pool draining process as I would like to get the CYA down and enjoy new water and cooler water temps for a bit.
Now my lying eyes see a clear pool, not crystal clear but clearly see the bottom of 9' deep end and only tiny floaters at night with the pool light on. There is some bottom debris each morning, what I assumed to be pollen from a 25' flowering Privit tree up wind of my pool. After reading the mustard algae topic I am uncertain if it is pollen but it is not adhered to the pool, not on the pool sides and not limited to the shade side. The small opaque bb sized globs do settle on the bottom, are easily disturbed but readily vacuum up. The fiberglass pool surface is much smoother than plaster, is very nice on the feet and does not allow adhesion of any debris.
Any thoughts?
Also how do you apply liquid chlorine when you are away for vacation?
I suppose getting my CYA levels down would allow me to use the tabs when on vacation but conditioners with CYA appear to be a one way problem in the long run. Why no tabs without CYA?
Thanks again for the site.
Great site, thanks in advance for the brain power.

Recently we bought a custom home built in 1950 which has an older rectangular 30,000 gallon concrete/plaster pool that was resurfaced with fiberglass 7 years ago.
It has a Pentair48 diatomaceous earth filter and supposedly a copper return line but this is not verified yet. I have replaced the grids and purchased a suction side Rebel sweeper with an inline leaf canister. I remove debris from the surface daily with a leaf net and the water is clear and water temps are approaching the high 80's.
I ran water tests to the local pool supply but had varied results coupled with bad advice and misspent money on my behalf, oh well.
I stepped up and upgraded my test kit to a Taylor K2006 and the numbers were as follows:
Free Cl 1.4 (morning test with night treatment)
Combined Cl .6
pH 7.4
TA 130
Ca Hardness 325
CYA 160
Previous owner and hired pool guy used trichlor tabs in a floater.
I have released the pool guy and use 10% bleach from Home Depot and upped the nightly rate to 1 gallon from the 80 ounces I started with. The pool will use half the chlorine over night it seems.
I found the pool math calculator and have determined I need to drain my pool 80% to get my CYA levels down. My recommended free Cl level calculated to a minimum 11 with a liquid chlorine requirement at over 2.5 gallons. Ouch $6.50+ a day for a minimum level free Cl and no possibility of a SLAM. I do intend to add the 2.6 gallons after sunset tonight and monitor the Chlorine so I will update this post. I also will begin to research the pool draining process as I would like to get the CYA down and enjoy new water and cooler water temps for a bit.
Now my lying eyes see a clear pool, not crystal clear but clearly see the bottom of 9' deep end and only tiny floaters at night with the pool light on. There is some bottom debris each morning, what I assumed to be pollen from a 25' flowering Privit tree up wind of my pool. After reading the mustard algae topic I am uncertain if it is pollen but it is not adhered to the pool, not on the pool sides and not limited to the shade side. The small opaque bb sized globs do settle on the bottom, are easily disturbed but readily vacuum up. The fiberglass pool surface is much smoother than plaster, is very nice on the feet and does not allow adhesion of any debris.
Any thoughts?
Also how do you apply liquid chlorine when you are away for vacation?
I suppose getting my CYA levels down would allow me to use the tabs when on vacation but conditioners with CYA appear to be a one way problem in the long run. Why no tabs without CYA?
Thanks again for the site.