Dilution. You have to remove the overstabilized water and top-off the pool with fresh.
Try it in a test sample first. Fill a cup, pour out 25%, top the cup back up with fresh non-pool water and retest your stabilizer level. If that's not low enough, try 33% or 50%. This will tell you how much water you will need to replace in your pool.
you have to aid a conditioner or stabilizer with cynaric acid in it.
When adding stabilizer to a pool you should not have a backwash valve open. Stabilizer should be added directly into the skimmer basket and you should open the skimmer all the way and close off the main drains for 24 hours.
Excessive levels of chlorine stabilizer can reduce the effectiveness of chlorine in the pool. Try diluting the pool water by partially draining and refilling it to lower the stabilizer concentration. Test the water again after dilution to see if the chlorine levels improve.
No, pool shock is normally a really strong chlorine and stabilizer is like sunscreen for the chlorine
no
No, muriatic acid and HTH stabilizer are not the same. Muriatic acid is a strong acid used to lower the pH of pool water, while HTH stabilizer (cyanuric acid) is used to prevent chlorine in the pool from being broken down by the sun's rays. Both serve different purposes in pool maintenance.
Remove some water in container (10-20%) and add new water. example: pump water high in cyanuric acid out of a swimming pool and the add fresh water to the pool.
Stabilizer is used to protect Chlorine from the UV rays of the sun. If chlorine is not protected from the sun, all the shock you added yesterday will be gone by lunchtime today. A normal stabizer level is around 40ppm (parts per million) if you get above 100 ppm your pool water can lock up and chemicals will become inactive. Also note: if your level becomes too high the only way to lower it is to exchange water in the pool. If you use a stabilized chlorine, it will, over time increase your stabilizer level in the pool. So be careful not to over stabilize. It is better to error on the side of under stabilize the to over stabilize. Stabilizer is also known as Cyanuric Acid
I confused this product with YPS, yellow prussiate of soda, which is an additive used in some salt that turns salt water pool water yellow. However, I continue to search for a better stabilizer than cyanuric acid, which accoringly remains in the water for ever?
Add chlorine and stabilizer.
Other chemicals in swimming pool water include cyanuric acid (stabilizer), calcium hardness increaser, algaecides, and clarifiers. These chemicals help maintain water quality, prevent algae growth, and keep the pool water clear.
Ad cyanuric acid/stabilizer, this is available from your pool shop