You should first get a lab test on the water. It may be perfectly good for pool use - but you won't know without a lab test.
You should first get a lab test on the water. It may be perfectly good for pool use - but you won't know without a lab test.
You should first get a lab test on the water. It may be perfectly good for pool use - but you won't know without a lab test.
9200 Gallons
You have to treat pool water with pool chemicals and use a pool filter to get and keep the water clear.
You do not treat pool water hardness with chemicals. If you have hard water in your area then you need to know what the allowable maximum of water hardness is before the water needs to be changed. You remove or reduce the hardness in water by draining and refilling the pool. K
Probably perfectly normal. I lose that in a 25,000 gallon pool in Houston.
2,134.88 cubic feet of water.
Cannot be answered without knowing the pool's depth!
there are 231 cubic inches in a gallon of water so there are 598.44 gallons of water in that size pool.
Find out how many gallons are in the pool and times it by 8. (8 pints in a gallon)
A 15,000-gallon pool has a volume of about 2,005 cubic feet.
If you are not worried about the pool floating on a high water table or you have a hydrostatic valve on the bottom. I would drain it clean it and start again.
Chlorine is an effective agent against treating your pool against bacteria. You can buy supplies to test and treat your pool at pool shops.
Around 3 days depending on water pressure.