Swimgirl
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Dust or pollen can definitely fool you into thinking you have algae again in your pool!
austinsmom01 said:PS. I made my son cry last night because I wouldn't let him in the pool. Told him it looked like rain (it did-storms brewing everyday) but when it didn't rain he cried again because he said he could have gotten in afterall. Then I told him the chlorine was too high and he asked why. When I told him I added bleach he said, bleach was for clothes NOT the pool and cried again!![]()
Alfred Beachport said:Does he understand that you're putting in the bleach to clean the water so that people don't get sick from it? Bleach is for cleaning. Clothes and water, and if you don't clean the water, it can make you ill.
Hotrod30 said:Since a lot of people are adding their two cents to this thread, I'll add mine.
I appreciate them
First, I wouldn't backwash so often. If you backwash, say at 10 lbs, let it go until it hits 15 lbs. When ever it hitting the mark where you backwash, give it an extra 5 lbs before you backwash.(but don't go to high, like above 25 lbs)
Ok but I thought when you were fighting algae you had to backwash often???
Second, at night before dark, I would hook-up the vacuuming equiptment, but turn the vacuuming head up-side-down, to act as a bottom drain, and let it run all night.
How about just the vacuum hose? Will that do?
Third, I would buy a bag of DE filter stuff. I would add it to the sand filter. (but not before I read the post about adding DE to a sand filter. In your case, I would only mix 1/2 cup to start with.
I will consider this but have to read more about it.
From a post by waste...... If you want to supplement the sand with DE, mix 1 cup in a gallon of water and add it to the skimmer - wait 20 min and see how much more the pressure is reading on the gauge. Add 1 cup/ 1 gal until you see the pressure on the gauge is 1 psi higher than when you started - keep track of how much it took to get the 1 psi rise and just use that same amount in the future all at once.
I still wonder if everyone here(including myself) is not missing something; like pollen in your yard is worse than normal yards, or a dusty dirt road is nearby.
No dirt road but lots of trees around and my backyard backs up against a paved road with some traffic but not heavy. I have a wooden security fence that seperates the yard.
Good luck
ssmith1627 said:I think that's a really good idea. Find out if you have metals in the water or just DIRT that needs to be vacuumed out.
I have little 1-inch wide low spots in the bottom of my pool all over -- just where the liner has conformed to the shape of the ground below it. If I don't vacuum for a while, the finest little "dust" will form there. I can wipe it away with a finger -- it just floats away -- but it will settle out again in time. I just assume it's fine dirt that we track in or that blows into the pool with the wind. I vacuum once a week or so to keep the bottom clean.
Steve