There's no universal guide to opening swimming pools . . . . and there never will be. There are too many different kinds of swimmnig pools, in different kinds of places, using different kinds of chemicals, and used by different kinds of swimmers.
It seems like each pool demands at least one thing different from all the rest. Still there are some tasks that are necessary, or at least a good idea, on almost all pools.
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As I've mentioned elsewhere, there is a treatment that is
sometime -- but not always -- pretty close to a magic
bullet for CHLORINE OR BROMINE POOLS ONLY: shocking
with 50 - 100 ppm of hydrogen peroxide. I don't know
why it works sometimes, and not others, but I've got
a guess. I suspect that if there's enough copper in the water to catalyse peroxide decomposition, and if the water is acid enough to allow the peroxide to be fairly active, it will work. I suspect sunlight may help, too. But, all this is a guess. [ All you chemists and biochemists out there, if you've got a better idea about what's happening, I'd love to hear it. When this works, it works extremely well, and I'd sure like to be able to tell people how to get predictable results with this technique. Heck, I'll even take advice from you rocket scientists at JPL. ] If you want to try, buy a DOUBLE start-up dose of peroxide for your pool from your nearest Baquacil or Softswim dealer, a SINGLE dose of copper algaecide, and a SINGLE dose of 60% polyquat algaecide. Get your water circulating, and adjust the pH to 7.0 - 7.4, then add the copper. Wait 4 hours; then add the peroxide directly to the pools. (NOT through the skimmer). If it works at all, you should see very substantial results in 24 hours. Regardless, add the polyquat after 24 hours. It's working for me about 2/3 of the time. The other times, it has no effect at all. Either way, wait 48 hours after adding the peroxide before you begin to chlorinate. Chlorine and peroxide destroy each other, so if any peroxide is left when you begin to chlorinate, you'll see bubbles of oxygen form in the water. |
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