Stop the pool for a couple of days and let the stuff settle to the bottom, you will note a cloudy layer at the bottom of the pool, carefully hand vacuum it to waste don't put it through your filter.
Is there a symptom in all of this? Clarifier can be added very regularly in cloudy pools to speed up the clean-up process, but too much in a clear pool isn't necessarily a bad thing either. Liquid Polymer-based water clarifiers coagulate small particulate in pool water, "magnetizing" it so that these clumps are now large enough for the filter to be able to trap them. Sand filters normally trap particles larger than 30 microns, missing small dust particulate, algae, and some cloudy water, and therefore require some help from time to time. Clarifiers are recommended applied weekly to promote sparkling water. As far as problems arising from clarifiers? One product that I've found to be incompatible with clarifiers would be sequestering or chelating agents for metals and hard water. If they both go in at the same time, almost permanently turbid water may occur.
If you add to much pool clarifier a couple of things could happen. You could make the pool toxic to you because the pH is too off-balance for example.
Wait a while and it will lower by the sun and bacteria. Check chlorine level with test kit before going in the pool
nothing. Both will just do what they usually do.
From what I gather from reading the back of the bottle of Clarifier that I use in my pool a Clarifier is a Flocculent. The clarifier contains a polymer that attracts the smaller particles floating around in the pool that are too small to be filtered through some filtration systems. As the clarifier attracts the smaller particles it becomes large enough for the filtration system to filter it out of the water thus clariying the pool water.
any
Not too often as it tends to block up filters unles you vacuum to waste.
# Test the swimming pool water for Combined Chlorine, pH, Alkalinity and Calcium Hardness. The two areas that are most likely to cause cloudy pool water are the pH and the Calcium Hardness. # If the pool chemical levels are not within the following suggested ranges, adjust the chemicals and run the pool filter system for 12-24 hours before re-testing. Free Chlorine: 1-3 ppm, pH: 7.2 - 7.6, Alkalinity: 90 - 120 ppm and Calcium Hardness: 200 - 350 ppm. # If all the pool chemical levels test in range, the cloudy pool water is caused by fine debris suspended in the pool water. You should backwash or clean your pool filter following the manufacturer's instructions, and run the pool filter system continuously for 24 to 48 hours. # If the water conditions have not significantly improved you should add a clarifier pool chemical to the pool water to help your pool filter remove the fine debris from the water. Continue filtering for 12 to 24 hours. # If the water conditions have not significantly improved you should add a second dose of clarifier, or a stronger clarifier chemical and continue to run your filtration system. # Sometimes a pool can be too cloudy for a clarifier. If this is the case you will have to move up to a floc. This will drop any suspended particles to the floor so you can vacuum it to waste. = It is common for pool water to become cloudy immediately after adding products to adjust the pool pH or Alkalinity. = If your pool water became cloudy within 6-8 hours of adjusting the pH or Alkalinity, continue circulating your water and it should clear within 24 hours as the water adjusts to the CHANGES YOU'VE MADE Suhail IsmailGENTECH UAE
um... i would have to say, empty the water (if you can) then clean the pool spotless. Make sure all the tubes (jets) and filter is cleaned out and spotless again. then fill it up with clean water. run it for a day or two and then add the chlorine or and other chemicals you want. (That's the best i can say) or get a new pool.
Too much iron in the water
Drain some water out, a little at a time, and add fresh water.
drain some of the water out of the pool and replace with fresh water it would probably pay to work out how much to salty so you can work out how much water to drain.
they will usually overflow, but in some cases they will pop.
Cooper or coPPer ? Too much cOOper , then ask Cooper to get out of the pool !!
Uh, if it overflows onto the deck!
if you drink too much and go swim in a pool you will drown and die.