You have to add more chlorine.
Using regular chlorine bleach (5% solution) at a rate of 6.5 ounces of bleach per 1000 gallons of water gives a chlorination level of 2ppm per 1000 gallons. To get the rate for 2500 gallons, multiply 6.5 by 2 to get 13 ounces for 2000 gallons, then divide 6.5 by 2 to get 3.25 ounces (the amount of bleach needed to treat 500 gallons) and add that to the 13 ounces to get a total of 16.25 ounces of chlorine bleach per 2500 gallons of waterat a level of 2ppm.For a swimming pool, you would likely want a 3ppm chlorine to water ratio (24.375 ounces bleach per 2500 gallons water).
The solvent would be water, the solute would be the chlorine chemicals
Olympic swimming pools use about 650000 gallons of water, so if you're trying to shock one using 10% liquid chlorine, you would need about 200 gallons of liquid shock - or if you're only adding choline as a primary sanitizer, not as a shock, you'd use about 65 gallons.
The only effect of chlorine water on diamonds would be to clean them.
yes, but it takes many gallons of clorox A: Clorox is only 5%. You would have to use 5 to10 as much of it then swimming pool liq. chlorine at 12.5%. The answer would be NO. You would end up using algaecides and other products in order to maintain the water. It could get quite costly for you.
You would need to install a water filtration system that also removes Chlorine from the water. Well water normally does not have chlorine it it so the source of the contamination would need to be determined and removed, or a new well drilled.
800 pounds of water would be 95.8 US gallons.
Of water no. Water would be about 32 pounds in 4 gallons.
Five gallons of sand would actually weigh more than five gallons of water.
The solvent would be water, the solute would be the chlorine chemicals.
You need to test the rest of your water chemistry if it is out of balance you will continue to be yellow. Condider putting only enough chlorine to have 2-3 PPM PH 7.2-7.6 Alkalinity 80-120 CYA around 80 ppm.Make sure your filter is kept clean.
No, metal-free does not have the ability to remove chlorine from water. Metal-free is typically a product used to sequester or bind metal ions in the water to prevent staining or other issues. To remove chlorine from water, you would need to use a chlorine neutralizer or a water filtration system that is designed to remove chlorine.