The lower the percentage of Sodium Hypochlorite typically the longer the shelf life...with the caveat that some "cheap" bleaches that are lower also have poor shelf life (or are sitting on the shelf somewhere long before being bought).
Well it is rather nice of them to do free testing. {smile}linen said:Yeah fun dealing with that pool store advice isn't it![]()
Even if it isn't accurate and misleads you into doing the wrong thing for your poolMithel said:Well it is rather nice of them to do free testing. {smile}
It's more accurate than "test strips".linen said:Even if it isn't accurate and misleads you into doing the wrong thing for your poolMithel said:Well it is rather nice of them to do free testing. {smile}![]()
Mithel said:It's more accurate than "test strips".linen said:Even if it isn't accurate and misleads you into doing the wrong thing for your poolMithel said:Well it is rather nice of them to do free testing. {smile}![]()
And they have this cool new machine that spins the water and does multiple samplings... etc.. etc...
Mithel said:I'm overwhelmed by how helpful everyone is trying to be. So here are the ingredients of the two forms of shock I've used most for many years:
Aqua Chem:
53.5% Trichloro-s-triazinetrione
Aqua Chem Plus:
58.2% Sodium dichloro-s-triazinetrione
Typically I can use two to four one pound bags to "shock" the pool once a week or maybe twice a week and the pool has been nice and clear.
This year we had a late summer (snow in May!) and a lot of rain. The pool was very cloudy up until last week (after putting literally hundreds of pounds of chemicals into it and several bottles of algeacide). Finally it cleared up, but then we had a burst of rain and now it's cloudy again. The pool store says my chemicals are nearly perfect now. Anyway, I got tired of buying and dumping massive amounts of chemicals into the pool so I found this website.
Although the pool store thinks my chemicals are near perfect, from reading here, I think my CYA is *far* too high. Their test reports read ">100" (and one read ">193"). So from what I'm reading, my chlorine isn't working because of too much CYA (stabilizer).
Anyway, I thought I'd try plain bleach as this site seems to advocate (although from what I'm hearing so far today bleach really isn't any cheaper than bags of "shock"). And yes again, I know I asked an imprecise question and several people did give me an answer which was what I wanted (being very crude one bag of shock equals about one gallon of bleach). Now I'll continue to learn and get more precise.
Oh, thanks. It's pretty rare that I've needed to lower pH. pH almost always tends to be low in my pool and thus I add a lot of pH+ (no doubt this is because of using diChlor and triChlor and their lowering of pH?).Leebo said:muriatic acid...... It's used to lower PH.