No, you use sodium thiosulfate.
I'm assuming 15 round? Not much, start with 4 ounces of granular per week, monitor levels to see where total and free is at. Make sure to shock weekly, too. A chlorine based shock is your chlorine levels need to be raised, or a non-chlorine oxidizer if your chlorine levels are above 5 ppm.
Chlorine tablets and Baking soda. You will need a floater to disburse the tablets and an OTO water tester to know how much Chlorine and Baking Soda to add. Hatawa
Free chlorine is the sanitizing portion of chlorine. You may not want to reduce that. Are the levels excessive? There is a product which reduces or eliminates chlorine but beware. Not a good product if you use too much. What are your readings?
Baking soda will almost certainly raise the pH level in a pool.
You may need to go to a much lower setting or turn it off for a brief period.
Chlorine has 17 protons.
An estimated 60 million. Bear in mind that population levels were much lower then.
Don't do anything. Chlorine goes away on its own, which is why you must monitor it and keep it at the correct level. If you have too much, wait a few days. If it is hotter than normal out, the chlorine will go away faster than normal.
By loosing some of the water and replacing it with unsalted water you will need to work out how much water will have to be thrown out to get the correct salt levels.
I do. Use half as much. Pool chlorine is 12.5% sodium hypochlorite Laundry bleach that I use is 6% sodium hypochlorite. Sometimes I dilute the pool chlorine by one part water to one part pool chlorine and use it just like regular laundry bleach.
4 cups of regular strength bleach daily per 10,000 gallons will keep the chlorine levels between 1 and 3 ppm. This pool needs 3.2L of liquid chlorine daily if stabilised or double that amount if not.
More of the earths water was frozen