Muriatic acid is the preferred chemical. You can also use dry acid (sodium bisulfate, pH down)) which is a bit easier to use but does increase sulfates, which can be detrimental to plaster surfaces, can foul salt cells, and is much more expensive to use.
Sodium Bisulphate is dry acid for swimming pool use.
yes you can use fusions at bromley swimming pool (the pavilion)
NO! You do not want to use Sulfuric Acid in a pool. That is battery acid and will burn you on contact. If is splashes back into your face or eyes you will be disfigured for life.=Use the products recommedede by the pool store in your area. I say this because not all areas require the same treatment.=
swimming, as in a swimming pool
swiming pool
A weak acid solution will usually clean this of. (take care with the acid though)
I would like for you to please remove the alligator from my swimming pool. Yes, there's an alligator in my swimming pool. I suppose the alligator mistook my swimming pool for the nearby pond.
After a while of swimming, your muscles use lactic acid. It uses it through Lactic acid fermentation. It results in more energy.
Swimming, running, and basketball use the lactic acid system.
I will not use the swimming pool today until after you chlorinate it.
According to the manufacturers tec support line Thoroseal is NOT recommended for swimming pool application.
That Acid is called Muriatic Acid. You put it in your swimming pool to lower the PH of the water. At lower PH Levels, the chlorine you use to sanitize the pool is more active, as a disinfectant. You MUST be careful not to put too MUCH Muriatic Acid in your pool! PH that is too low will create potentially deadly fumes, so test your water. Low pH is corrosive to plaster and metal pool parst.