Stubborn cloudiness

lmisko

0
Jul 22, 2016
74
Twin Cities, MN
As of last night...

FC 8.5
CC 0.5
pH 7.6~7.7
TA 230
CH 250
CYA ~75

I performed an OCLT and passed just the other night. I have barely added any chlorine to the system since my first bump up to 9.0 when I first opened. I can see the bottom no problem. I was getting my official pool "teach" yesterday and the guy said the water looked really good but it was a little hazy. He said to come down and get some "clarifier" and add it to the pool. (I chuckled inside a little) So what should I really do? Like I said, its not terrible...but at night with my lights on I can plainly see the haze and little particles just floating around the lights. I am still thinking its a filtration thing since my FC levels are stable and my CC levels are barely 0.5. The filter is brand new so maybe I haven't backwashed it correctly. Could the TA/CH have an effect like this? Thanks so much. I am almost there I can feel it!
 
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You will always see floaters in the pool light.

Two things come to mind:
1) Refresh your memory on what FC CC and TC are. What you posted would indicate major problems, so I suspect it's a typo or some confusion with our acronyms,
2) A little DE (or cellulose filter media) added to your sand filter can really polish the water. It's like laying window screen atop chicken wire on a microscopic scale. You don't need much, so try to beg a coffee can worth off a neighbor or even off the guy who suggested clarifier. Buying the smallest package of it will leave you with a ten year supply.
 
Food grade is not what you're looking for. The pool stuff is different. You should find it in the pool section of a hardware store, and some pool stores carry it. It only comes in huge 20+lb boxes, which like Richard says is good for a decade. Borrow if you can, but DE filters may or may not be common in your area.

Yes, you need to re-add after every backwash. Just be aware the first few times you use it, the pressure may jump considerably in the first 20-30 minutes. Check the pressure often and backwash. It's a satisfying feeling, knowing it's collecting all sorts of junk that was floating around your pool. :)

Edit: Also, be sure to look at your local codes before backwashing. Some require discharge into the sewer, other locales don't care.
 
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