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I have to clean it

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11y ago

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How do you get rid of chemical smells in a swimming pool?

To get rid of chemical smells in a swimming pool, you can first check the pH and chlorine levels to ensure they are balanced. Increasing the pool's water circulation and adding activated carbon or a pool deodorizer can help absorb and eliminate the chemical odors. Regular pool maintenance and proper water treatment will also prevent future chemical smells in the pool.


Why would there be brown algae on the bottom of a gunite pool and how do you get rid of it?

Algae spores float around in the air and can hit your pool at any time You can fix it by 1 shocking the pool and scrubbing the walls and floor of the pool if this doesn't clear it up just get an algaecide from your pool shop. When you vacuum the dead algae out of the pool it would be a good idea to vacuum it to waste to reduce the risk of reinfecting the pool.


How do you get rid of algae in a salt water pool?

Proper water chemistry balance and frequent testing water and adjustment of chemicals. See your local pool store for a one on one advice for your specific pool. Not neglecting the pool is a good start. Now you are in for a lot of work. k


How do you get rid of black algae in a drained pool?

Vigorous and INSANE cleaning. If it is truly black algae, and not another type, this is the true bane of fishkeeping. My recommendations are investing in an algae scrubber and a scraper also (not a magnetic cleaner, these are practically useless). Take out any decor that has visibly been infested and throw it away. Boil any decor that you have left. If you cannot boil it, get rid of it. Change out all of your filter media and/or cartridges. Scrub down the glass and then scrape it. Do a 20% water change. And, most importantly of all, PRAY. Because even this might not get rid of it.


What do you do to get rid of white calcium looking flakes that settle to the bottom of your pool and when stirred up turn your water a milky white?

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.