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3 answers

Your local pool store will have the chemicals and indicators for that. They will also tell you, or give you printed instructions, on how to achieve the balance of chemicals.

2007-06-25 13:56:58 · answer #1 · answered by TitoBob 7 · 0 1

Get the test strips. Make sure you get the right ones. It will depend on whether you use chlorine or bromine.

The biggest mistake most people make is adding too much chemicals. I have found with mine that it only takes bromine and baking soda to keep it looking nice. The PH will usually go low and the baking soda will get the PH up where it should be and keep the reserve alkalinity up. The reserve alkalinity will help the PH from making wild swings.

Just add a little and then wait for several hours, and give the chemical a chance to work.

PS. I do add a little, and I mean one cap-full of anti-foam every six months or so. good luck. Sometimes less is more.

2007-06-25 21:09:05 · answer #2 · answered by Fordman 7 · 0 1

The same as pool water. Go to http://appliancequickfix.com/
they have a good page on water maintenance. Dont listen to
a bunch of nonsense from the pool store.

2007-06-25 22:53:17 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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