This is more personal preference than anything. It is recommended that the pump be on all the time, but usually only running it a couple hours a day will usually circulate the water enough. You want to run it to circulate the chemicals and to keep the surface clean from debree. Good luck.
I could not disagree more ---- Running the filter while swimming makes more sense since you want to remove the contaminants that you add to the pool from your body and from what you track in on your feet. Running the filter for several hours after swimming is also recommended. It should take from 6 to 8 hrs per day to turn the whole body of water over thru the filter depending upon your pump. Two or a "couple" of hrs. per day is totally inefficient. What that minimum turn over rate does is leave what the filter could not filter out that day and leave it for the next day -- to contaminate what already has been filtered clean - compounding the problem. Thus you never quite get a grasp on truly clean, clear, sanitized, filtered water. Having partially contaminated water increases the use of chlorine, algaecide, and other harsh products.
This above applies to gray or cloudy or green water or all combined. Good filtration and proper water chemistry are the key factors in good pool health -- for the water -- for your health. Having cloudy or gray water can and will be harmful to your health. There are several pathogens, parasites etc in this type of water -- Cryptosporidium - a parasite - which cannot be seen -- causes diarrhea. Other microbes can make you very ill. People especially females are susceptible to many of these disease causing parasites.
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Yes, as long as the pool is grounded and bonded and yiou have ground fault circuit, allrequired by code.
However, I would not swim in the pool with pump on during a rainstorm, just to be on the extra safe side, and of course you may not want to be in it during a thunderstorm at any rate, whether it is on or off.
Pumps run, but I've never known them to swim. People, however, can run or swim, and the filter pump should be running while they're swimming.
Sure you can. There is some possible danger of entrapment. Care should be taken not to let children play with pool equipment IE: suction side pool sweepers and older type drains.
yes
Yes, you are supposed to add it while there is water in the pool. Add with filter running near a return line. Add it slowly and if possible, brush the pool to help mix the acid. You can swim within 30-60 minutes.
Assuming your pool is set up properly with all suction points safely installed and isolated from the swimming area. There is no reason not to swim with the filtration equipment running. As a matter of fact it is preferable to have the filters running while the pool is in use.
NO BIG DEAl!! It's as if you SHOCKED THE pool & you can swim in as little as 1 hr with pump/filter running!!
if u have a filter
if u have a filter
Filter it then swim in it.
I would chlorinate the pool and run filter for several hours, and you will be fine
Yes, of course. As long as the amount of chlorine in the water is as directed by retailer there should be no reason one could not swim in a pool while it is being chlorinated.
Let's assume that the original sentence was "You and your sister swim in the pool." In this case, the predicate would be "swim in the pool", while the subject(s) would be "You and your sister". Note: "Your sister and you" is improper English.
If your Mexican landscapers let their children swim in your pool while they are working in your yard, ..... your pool has lice.
I don't see why you couldn't.
where can i find a manual for a swim pro sand pool filter s48c 51201?