Use something acidic i.e. acetic acid (vinegar)
Sounds like white water mold to me. Hum, take a sample of the "flakes" and water if possible to local pool store for analyzing. k If you have a Salt Water Chlorinating system and hard water to start with, then what you are seeing is calcium precipitation. Water can only hold a certain amount of dissolved minerals. When sodium is introduced to the water, it displaces the calcium which precipitates in an insoluble form and builds up inside the ion exchanger. The flakes break loose and are introduced to the pool via the water return lines.
u could get a net and scoop it out or a boul
Put a tarp roughly as big as your pool on it overnight if it is near a garden with good hiding places for small things.
Calcium Chloride. You can purchase it at pool supply stores for less than the brand-name refills.
Salt water pools are in fact chlorine pools part of the salt is turned into chlorine by the salt water chlorinater If it works in a normally chlorinated pool it should also work in a salt water pool. However you should check if there is any metallic ingredient like copper in it as these are not recommended in salt water pools.
Ants are not necessarily attracted to your salt system for your swimming pool. However, they are attracted to rotting leaves and other organisms found by a swimming pool. To get rid of ants around your pool you can spray a 40 percent water, 40 percent rubbing alcohol, and 20 percent dish soap around the outside of your pool.
Salt itself is a preservative however a bag of pool salt will last indefinitely as long as it is kept dry. It may become a solid block given time however this will soon melt away once added to water. I am in the pool industry however my main business specialises in getting rid of unwanted ducks and geese. Michael
thats a bad idea to have an inground salt water pool in concrete. the salt water it self may eat away some parts of the concrete, plus the fact that its underground and contains salt it attracts worms. maybe you should pour alot of clorine in the pool to kill them, then empty out the water and start fresh.
You don't. Usually, lanthanum sulfate is used - hardly a household chemical - any metal salt that contains lanthanum, calcium, or aluminum is supposed to do it, but I wouldn't put most of those into my pool. Stick with the chemicals that work. Note that you don't really need to bring your phosphate levels down unless you have an active algae problem, or often have algae problems.
What is the best way to get rid of rough spots on pool steps??
The RID master will allocate the pool of RIDs to the DC, So we can create the objects without RID master. When this RID pool exhausted we can't create object.
Saltwater fish are able to excrete(get rid of) salt via the gills and via the urine.