Pool store sold me PhosFree...wondering if I should use it...

binovc

0
Jun 6, 2018
22
Southaven, MS
We had pool wall stains, and decided to use ascorbic acid "Stain Free."
The readings on the test strip were:
Ch:0
Ph: 6.8-ish
TA: 8-ish
CYA: 30-50 -ish

I don't know any of the other levels.
(I've browsed enough recently on the forum to guess you will scoff at test strips, but that's what I currently have, and what I have been advised to use). Not saying I won't get a "real" test kit, but I just don't have one now.

So the stain cleared up, and then we added Leslie's Super Metal-X (don't see that for sale anymore, so probably old). Although it does not state on the bottle, I guess that this is a chelant (sp?).

Water up to this point was pretty clear, but then began to get seriously cloudy. It is beginning to clear up however (I can now see the bottom anyway).

We could never get the chlorine readings to change, even when we added 1-2 lbs of dichloro-s-triaz-whatever shock (this was before we added the Stain Free). Started wondering if our strips were bad. Took a water sample to the pool store, and he tested it for phosphates, and he said it was "higher than his scale went to" (sorry - don't know the number he mentioned) and suggested to use the PhosFree. He said I would never get a higher chlorine reading because the phosphates were using up all the chlorine. He also didn't give me the test levels of anything else. I neglected to ask, as by now he was going to the shelf for the phosfree.

This is the first time we have had this issue.

So before I added this $30 product, I started surfing, and have predominantly seen that there is no need to use this stuff.
It's been over a week since I added the Stain Free, so supposedly it is now safe to shock the pool. From reading the net, I THINK I have determined I should add 5 lbs of the dichlor shock (hey 'shock' what the package says it is...).

So - based on my (probably inadequate - sorry) report, should shocking be my next step? 5 lbs? more than 5? Should I use the phosfree or return it? The water is not green, though I suppose that could change at any time...
Thanks for any advice!
 
Yes - have seen Pool School and started reading.. Though earlier in the week I was reading stuff from a Pool School from a different site (swim university) on "how to shock a swimming pool". Obvious to me (now) not the same "school". No mention of liquid chlorine bleach. So I've been in some state of confusion about pool schools until now.
I did read about the SLAM process, but only just earlier today, but don't have the appropriate test kit, and by the time I get that would be too late for this issue. Did not understand the Chlorine/CYA chart, but as I get more "schooling" I'm sure it will make sense.
Last season I got the idea (quite possibly from here) to start using liquid chlorine bleach, because my CYA got so high. But I couldn't figure out how to use it effectively. So I reverted to what "I had always used" and got more dichlor. I will re-examine using bleach.
I suspected that about the Metal-X containing phosphates, but no ingredients are on the bottle. I called Leslie's and whomever I spoke with was more clue-less than me. She eventually started reading a script about pool care, all I was asking was if their product contained phosphates...
:confused:
Probably didn't help that (I believe) the product is no longer in their inventory.
Thanks for the replies!
 
You are driving blind until you get one of the recommended test kits.

I would suggest that you choose a method and stick with it ... don't try to mix information from various locations. Obviously, I would recommend you stick around here ;)
 
Ok, I ordered the TF100.
I also returned the phosfree. The clerk says I will not be able to get my chlorine level up until I lower the phosphate level. I told him I'm trying a different approach.
I did ask him to test another sample:
ph: 6.3
FC/CC/TC: 0/0/0
TA: 40
CYA (stabilizer) - he said he couldn't test that. My aquachek strip shows "low" (or maybe 30-40, tough to differentiate the color on the strip).
So, while I'm waiting for my kit - twiddle my thumbs? I suppose I could increase the ph... Should I add some algaecide to help stave off potential greening of the pool?
I'm also going shopping for some liquid chlorine bleach. I suppose the higher the concentration the better, right? Or just get the cheapest?
Thanks.
 
Don’t add anything except liquid chlorine until your test kit comes. Use Pool Math to determine how much.

You are going to prove that clerk wrong!
 
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