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Low-Chlo: Run Your Pool at 1 PPM of Chlorine!

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Are you tired of the "salt pool trap"? Most people switch to salt thinking it’s maintenance-free, only to get hit with $900 cell replacements, fried control boards, and rusted heaters. In today’s video, we’re looking at the Low-Chlo Swim Sanitizer —a patented mineral system that gives you the soft, crystal-clear water of a salt pool but with zero electricity and zero salt corrosion. 💎 Why Low-Chlo is Changing the Game The Low-Chlo system isn't just another filter; it’s a commercial-grade mineral technology designed for residential pools. It uses a proprietary blend of metallic media to neutralize algae and bacteria on contact. $0 Electricity Cost: Unlike salt systems that spike your bill, Low-Chlo runs 100% on your existing pump flow. No More "Chlorine Smell": By doing the heavy lifting naturally, you only need a fraction of the chlorine (typically less than 1 ppm). No more red eyes or itchy skin. Stop the Corrosion: Because there’s no salt added to the wat...

Adding Salt to Your Pool? Don’t Make These Mistakes!

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 Saltwater pool startup goes smoother when you treat it like a chemistry setup, not a switch you flip. Whether you’re converting a chlorine pool to a saltwater chlorine generator or starting a brand new salt pool build, the big theme is control: control the surface cure, control the pH rise, and control how fast you change salinity. A salt cell creates chlorine but it also drives pH up through aeration inside the cell and the chemical reaction itself. That pH climb is manageable in a stable pool, but it can become a constant battle if you rush the process or begin with unbalanced water. New plaster pools need extra patience because plaster curing creates high acid demand for months, with the first 2 to 3 months being the hardest window. Starting the saltwater generator immediately stacks two problems on top of each other: curing plaster pushes you to add acid, and the salt cell pushes pH upward at the same time. The result can be persistent high pH, scaling risk, and a surface that...

How to Identify Unprofitable Pool Customers

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 Running a profitable pool service route isn’t only about water chemistry and clean tile lines. It’s also about choosing the right pool accounts and the right customers. This episode of the Pool Guy Podcast Show breaks down a hard truth for pool service pros: certain pools and certain customer types will quietly drain your time, energy, and margins until your whole week feels heavier than it should. The core idea is route optimization: building a schedule of pools that are serviceable, predictable, and priced correctly so you can grow a stable pool cleaning business without dreading stops on your route. Keywords that matter here include pool route management, pool service pricing, pool maintenance accounts, and how to drop a pool customer professionally. One major theme is identifying “difficult customers” early. A picky customer who constantly questions your work, sends repeated texts about minor debris, or claims the water “doesn’t look right” can turn a normal weekly service int...

The Small Details That Quietly Kill Pool Route Profits

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 Pool service profitability often leaks from tiny, repeatable mistakes, not big disasters. One of the most expensive is breaking your normal stop routine and forgetting a key chemical step like adding chlorine tablets or shocking when needed. A customer interruption, a phone call, or one extra trip to the truck can knock you off sequence, and the result shows up the next week as algae, extra brushing time, and added chemicals that eat into margin. Build a consistent checklist for every stop, place chemicals at a deliberate point in the visit, and always do a “look back” before leaving to confirm floaters, baskets, and chlorinators are set. Tight systems beat good intentions, especially during summer heat and high workload days. Another major cost in a pool route is time spent driving to outlier accounts. In dense markets, a 15 to 20 minute drive to service a single pool can erase the profit you thought you were earning, because that same block of time could complete two or more nea...

What’s Inside a Trichlor Tablet? (And Why It Matters)

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Trichlor chlorine tablets, often called chlorine pucks, have become one of the most common tools in swimming pool care because they are convenient, potent, and easy to store. They contain roughly 90% available chlorine, which makes them one of the strongest chlorine products by percentage. The catch is that they dissolve slowly, so they are great for steady daily sanitation but a poor choice when a pool is at zero free chlorine or actively growing algae. If you need an immediate chlorine boost for a green pool, liquid chlorine or another fast-acting sanitizer is usually the better move while tablets maintain a baseline. For pool service routes and DIY pool maintenance alike, understanding what trichlor does well and what it cannot do quickly is the first step toward better water quality. Supply history and pricing also explain why pool owners treat tablets like “the default.” The market shifted over time from older practices like chlorine gas dosing toward stabilized tablet systems, es...

Bob Lowry Breaks Down the Most Powerful Chlorine for Pools

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 Chlorine gets marketed with big numbers, and those numbers often create more confusion than clarity. Pool owners and even many pros hear that liquid chlorine is “weak” because it might say 10% or 12.5%, while trichlor tablets can claim 90% or 99% available chlorine. The key is learning what those percentages actually describe and how they’re measured. Some labels reflect weight-to-weight concentration, others use trade percent conventions, and liquids introduce volume-based assumptions that don’t map cleanly onto dry products. A practical comparison cuts through the noise: a gallon of 12.5% sodium hypochlorite delivers about one pound of pure chlorine equivalent, while a pound of trichlor delivers roughly 0.9 pounds of chlorine equivalent. Once you translate products into “pounds of available chlorine delivered,” the strongest chlorine type becomes a math question, not a branding contest, and you can dose accurately for pool sanitation and water chemistry control.   A bi...

Bob Lowry Explains Why Some Products Kill Your Pool Chlorine

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Zero chlorine in a swimming pool is one of the most frustrating problems for pool service pros and homeowners because it often shows up right after you do something “helpful” like adding a stain remover or a sequestering agent. You test, see no free chlorine residual, add more chlorine, and the next reading is still zero. This creates a cycle of chemical demand, wasted sanitizer, and a pool that can be unsafe for swimmers. The key idea is that some pool chemicals create an immediate oxidizer demand, meaning the chlorine you add gets consumed before it can establish a measurable residual. Understanding why this happens helps you choose better products, dose correctly, and avoid repeated chlorine loss after metal treatment or algae treatments. Stain removers and many metal control products are made from ingredients that are readily oxidized by chlorine. If you add a product that chlorine wants to oxidize, then immediately add chlorine, you are essentially forcing a chemical reaction that...