MITBeta
Gold Supporter
- May 28, 2020
- 1,239
- Pool Size
- 13000
- Surface
- Vinyl
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- CircuPool RJ-45 Plus
Adding CYA:what's the best way to add in stabilizer if need be... can I add it into the skimmer?
Exactly!I think the intent is to just round up to the next multiple of 10 - so if you see the dot disappearing anywhere between 80 and 90 - that's a 90. You don't try to 'guess' between multiples of 10 and call it an 85 for example.
Either way - you're pretty high up there. For sure do not add any more stabilizer or use pucks with stabilizer. You could consider draining a bit of water or just vacuuming to waste a few times.
And for that high a CYA - you need more chlorine in the water ASAP!
You'd be much better off doing this BEFORE you do a SLAM. You'll get rid of half the algae, and be able to use less chlorine to kill the other half.think I'm gonna drain my pool to lower the cya after I get the slam done
Have not - looks like something designed for smaller above ground pools. Does it list a rated capacity at all (what size pool it claims to work for)?
Likely not as robust as the more mainstream options - but these things either tend to work or not work, and it's a matter of if it can produce enough chlorine for your pool. I've been pretty happy with my more affordable Intex SWCG - we'll see how long it lasts (on season 3 now).
i called swim waves customer support and they recomended that for my pool sizeNot sure I understand - how did you get to the recommended 175#? That is going to give an entirely different PPM based on what pool size you have. The SWCG will need a certain PPM salt to work properly, normally you would then test your pool for salt (most pools already have salt in them from other chemicals), and then use PoolMath to figure out how much salt you need to add by using the "effect of adding chemicals" functionality. Do you have a way to test for salt level?
here is a picture of my swg which says 18' 52" my pool is 42" deep
OK - that's find and dandy, but that likely assumes you start with 0 salt in the pool. I find it really odd they don't give a PPM that you should be aiming for... that said, the SWCG is either happy or it's not, and should give you a warning if its too high/low on salt.i called swim waves customer support and they recomended that for my pool size
yes i have a way to measure salt amount
My manual says on top P5E0004000.... it does state that the optimum salt levels in the pool water is between 2500-3500 optimal is 3000ppm
Yes, we are concerned, and avoid products containing metals.according to TFP are we at all concerned with metals like copper ?
the other week when i had my water tested at the pool store it stated a 2.8 level for copper ... how can i get this to 0Yes, we are concerned, and avoid products containing metals.
Metals - Further Reading
www.troublefreepool.com