I live in the Netherlands and our town's water supply is provided from a ground source. It contains unusually visible amounts of metal straight from the tap which makes even taking a bath unpleasant. 
This is my third year of managing this amount of metal in a pool. I've read countless threads on how others manage metal. It can take a week or two of constant filtering with both the sand filter and polyfill (in the skimmers) to get enough of the oxidised metal out the pool to restore it to blue. Sequestrant seems to be a bit hit and miss and expensive. Performing a SLAM is impossible without causing more oxidation.
Last weeked I added a gallon of chlorine after topping up the pool with fresh water. Within ten minutes the chlorine had oxidised the metal and the pool had the tell-tale green tinge. Clearing the pool was an emergency as we had a couple of parties planned this week (public holiday in Netherlands) and I had no time to filter the pool clear.
So after some reading (and experimenting) I decided to floc the pool for the first time. I've never used floc before and didn't know whether it would work for oxidised metal. However at this point I was desparate, so it was worth a shot.
The results were immediate and amazing. Within thirty minutes of adding the floc, whilst it was still mixing (multiport valve on recirculate), I could already see oxidised metal dropping to the botton of the pool
. Once mixed, I switched off the pump and left overnight. After vacuuming to waste this morning my water is perfectly blue and crystal clear!
I know that floc is generally frowned upon within TFP. However in my circumstances, with limited time to fix the pool, it did a great job and will now be part of my armoury against metals in the future.




This is my third year of managing this amount of metal in a pool. I've read countless threads on how others manage metal. It can take a week or two of constant filtering with both the sand filter and polyfill (in the skimmers) to get enough of the oxidised metal out the pool to restore it to blue. Sequestrant seems to be a bit hit and miss and expensive. Performing a SLAM is impossible without causing more oxidation.
Last weeked I added a gallon of chlorine after topping up the pool with fresh water. Within ten minutes the chlorine had oxidised the metal and the pool had the tell-tale green tinge. Clearing the pool was an emergency as we had a couple of parties planned this week (public holiday in Netherlands) and I had no time to filter the pool clear.
So after some reading (and experimenting) I decided to floc the pool for the first time. I've never used floc before and didn't know whether it would work for oxidised metal. However at this point I was desparate, so it was worth a shot.
The results were immediate and amazing. Within thirty minutes of adding the floc, whilst it was still mixing (multiport valve on recirculate), I could already see oxidised metal dropping to the botton of the pool
I know that floc is generally frowned upon within TFP. However in my circumstances, with limited time to fix the pool, it did a great job and will now be part of my armoury against metals in the future.




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