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I don't believe it does - I think it just prevents stains. I have calcium stains on my pool because I poured powedered shock into the pool over the winter when the water wasn't circulating (don't do that!) -- now I'm grinding them off by hand witha diamond abrasive pad screwed to a long metal pool and it's grueling work. There's no way a checmial would take these off - even a wire brush didn't make a dent. Good luck
Chlorine kills bacteria their for it will clean and disinfect your pool or hot tube
You can, if the water presently in the pool is 'hard' - but be very careful to keep an eye on the Calcium Hardness of the pool water. If you filled a pool with water from the softener, the water would be hungry for calcium and drag it out of the pool walls, making them feel and look like sandpaper. Calcium hardness should be kept within 200-275ppm. best to use regular water for topup and keep the pool water properly balanced (see your local pool store).
I have to clean it
There is no way to reduce the calcium level except by draining some or all of the water. High calcium levels are a problem mostly in the southwest part of the US. Draining a pool can be dangerous if the water table is high; the pool can actually pop out of the ground.
You can use mild muriatic acid to remove clacium build up on tiles.
Stop using Calcium Chloride as your chlorination and start using tablets. Keep your pH level at 7.2 and brush the calcium deposits occasionally. There are calcium removers that you can buy at your pool supply store that will reduce the calcium in the water as well. Hatawa
The anwser to this QuestionWe would use a termometre to measure , the temperature of a swimming pool .A thermometer.
High calcium can causeSkin and eye irritationCloudy waterClogged pool filtersPoor filtrationCalcium build-up and corrosion on heatersScaling of the pool waterReally the only way to reduce calcium hardness is to partially drain the pool, 1/3, then refill. It may cause staining but that would be the least of your worries if you had a heater.
To raise calcium in your pool use calcium chloride. You premix it in a container to let it dissolve and add 6lb for 10pmm in a 50,000g pool.
how to clean spit in a pool
Had the same problem. Turned out that i needed the electrodes replaced, since doing that, its working fine, now i have a problem with 2much sand in the filter (No idea how much sand is needed)
Shocking is not useful response for a broken pool thermometer. Most pool thermometers are electronic sensors or bimetallic strips, which won't put anything into the pool if they break, or are based on colored alcohol, for which shocking will not do anything. If your broken thermometer used mercury (unlikely) it will settle to the bottom and into the drain traps. You need to get the mercury out of the drains.
you can't its permanent
Rephrase the question. What type of shock have you used? Is it a calcium based shock treatment? Supply more info.
Use a thermometer.
As long as the pool is properly chlorinated (2-3 ppm's) it will be sanitary to take a shower. Calcium is kept high on concrete pools so don't expect to much lather.