That depends on the normal amount of biomass in the water the more dust leaves body fats and other biological material in the water the more chlorine it occupied with these materials and as a result the less free chlorine is available to cope with souses of infection. ask your local pool shop about testing kits for testing the chlorine level in your pool or take a sample to them they will test it for you for free.
Just increase the dial or input to the unit that generates the cell. Make sure the conditioner level in the water is at the correct level and add phosphate remover to help the level stay in the water and not used to clean up phosphates.
That depends on the amount of bio material in the water. A test it available from pool shops will aid you in determining this.
Those that the manufacturer of your device states.
Our state health department allows chlorine levels of 1.0-7 ppm. Most operators keep pools at 2-3 ppm.
Association of Pool & Spa Professionals (APSP) guide line is 2 Parts Per Million (PPM) to 4 PPM
none saline is supposed to keep it crystal clear and sanitary because salt water is inhospitable to bacteria and algae
1-5 parts per million
Water in a swimming pool is compound because the water and chlorine have been chemically combined.
No. Swimming Pools contain water with chlorine
chlorine bleach, tap water, salt, swimming pool water.
You can add sodium thiosulfate, circulate for one hour and chlorine will be gone.
first you must test for ph with a ph testing kit, then if the water is a good ph level, add 2L chlorine for every 100L, then wait for 2 days, then get in the pool and it should be fine! ;) my number's: 0473897234
Cl is an abbreviation for "chlorine" you should check free chlorine and total chlorine for comparison.
It is necessary because the chlorine kills all of the germs that enter the swimming pool.
Chlorine is not so much good for swimming but it is good for keeping the water free from harmful microorganisms, economically.
No. In fact chlorine is added to swimming pools to kill bacteria.
No. They are a salt water animal and chlorine is used in fresh water like swimming pools.
If the swimming pool water is milky, it is advisable to have the level of stabiliser (cyanuric acid) tested. A level of over 80ppm in the pool water is likely to lead to "chlorine lock" which can turn the water milky. If the problem is the stabiliser, you will need to drain some of the swimming pool water and refill with fresh water to bring the stabiliser level down to 30-50ppm. To avoid the level getting out of control, use a non-stabilised chlorine product such as calcium hypochlorite. http://www.havuz.org/pool_blog/2004_01_01_pool-problems.htm
Chlorine is added to swimming pool water to disinfect it.