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HomeArticlesCommunityMy Profile WH.translationData = {'de': {'msg':"Lies auch unseren deutschen Artikel: Wie man ein Schwimmbad schockt."},'es': {'msg':"\u00bfTe gustar\u00eda saber Como hacer el tratamiento de choque en una piscina? \u00a1Lee acerca de eso en espa\u00f1ol!"}};WH.mergeLang({'navlist_collapse': '- collapse','navlist_expand': '+ expand'});EditHome » Categories » Home and Garden » Swimming Pools Spas and Hot TubsHow to Shock Your Swimming PoolEdited by Brian Barker, Flickety, Michael Silvester, Nicole Willson and 13 othersPin ItArticle EditDiscussShocking is also known as super chlorinating. It's a way to keep pool water safe and clean by adding three to five times the normal amount of chlorine or other chemical sanitizer to the pool water to drastically raise the chlorine level for a short time. This will help to remove ineffective chlorine amounts, kills bacteria and anything organic in the pool, and boosts the availability of effective chlorine.[1] Shocking the pool is an important regular maintenance step with which every pool owner should be familiar.Pool experts recommend shocking a pool at a minimum of once a month. If the water is warm (such as for a spa pool), twice a month minimum is recommended.[1] However, some pool experts recommend shocking pools once a week, or more frequently, if the pool is used heavily, after large amounts of rain, or during extended periods of hot, sunny weather.2Shock after the sun has gone down. This will prevent the sun's UV rays from affecting the chlorine or other chemical and ensures that the majority of the chemical is available to shock the pool.[1]Pre-Shocking Preparation1Dissolve the pool shock chemicals. This must be done before adding the pool shock chemicals to the swimming pool. All forms of pool shock chemicals are granular and should dissolve relatively quickly.Fill a 5-gallon/19 liter bucket with water from the pool.
Slowly pour the granular pool shock into the bucket of water.Never add water to a chemical; always add chemicals to water.2Stir the bucket well. Agitate the water for one minute or more to dissolve the pool shock chemicals.
Adding the Pool Shock Chemicals1With the filtration system running, slowly pour the bucket of dissolved shock directly in front of a return line fitting. You will see the water being carried out into the pool by the jet of water coming from the return line.
Pour slowly enough that all of the water from your bucket is carried out into the pool and does not settle to the pool floor. Pouring slowly is also vital to prevent splashing on your skin, clothes and any surfaces, which can injure or stain, depending on what the splashes land on.[1]Pour as close to the water's surface as possible.2Refill with water. When you are pouring and get near the bottom of the bucket of dissolved shock water (down to about 1/4 left in the bucket), fill the bucket back up with water.Stir the bucket of water again for one minute or more, to dissolve left over shock granules at the bottom of the bucket, which did not dissolve the first time.Continue pouring until all the contents are used.If undissolved granules reach the pool floor bottom, stir them up with a pool cleaner.3Do readings before re-entering the pool water. Swimming in water with too much chlorine is very dangerous. Wait until the water reads 3ppm or less.
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Edit TipsShock chemicals can also be released by a floating chemical dispenser or a mechanical feeder, rather than doing the shocking manually. Mechanical feeders require very exact proportions and only the chemicals the manufacturer says are suitable.If you have a vinyl liner in your swimming pool, you cannot allow un-dissolved pool shock to settle to the floor, because this may bleach or stain your pool liner.
Categories: Featured Articles | Swimming Pools Spas and Hot Tubs
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