Posts

Think All Pool Acids Are the Same? Think Again

Image
Muriatic acid is one of the most common tools for lowering pool pH, but most problems start with misunderstanding what “strength” really means. Pool acid is often discussed in terms of Baumé, which relates to density and helps indicate the percent concentration of hydrochloric acid. Because muriatic acid is heavier than water, it sinks when poured, which is why dosing technique matters for surface protection. A key takeaway for pool chemistry is that the industry-standard 31.45% muriatic acid behaves very differently than big-box store products that can be closer to the mid-teens in concentration. If you use a weaker acid and follow a calculator built for 31.45%, you may underdose, see little pH movement, and assume something is “wrong” with the water.   Accurate dosing depends on matching your calculator inputs to the actual product. Many LSI-based tools and pool dosing charts assume 31.45% muriatic acid, so switching to 15% without adjusting can cut effectiveness roughly in ...

Surprising Pool Chemical Reactions Every Pool Pro Should Know

Image
Pool chemistry problems often look like “bad luck,” but many are predictable reactions that show up the same way on routes everywhere: sudden sanitizer demand, instant cloudiness, rough plaster, and filters that plug overnight. A key example is cyanuric acid (CYA). The common belief is that stabilizer never leaves the water unless you drain and refill, so a low reading must be dilution from rain or splash-out. Dilution is real, but it is not the only explanation. Under certain conditions, bacteria can convert cyanuric acid into ammonia, and CYA can drop dramatically over winter. For pool service professionals, that matters because ammonia drives chlorine demand through the roof, turning a routine cleanup into repeated dosing with little result until the underlying demand is satisfied. Another misconception shows up when calcium hardness is low and you want a fast correction. Calcium chloride is effective, but it is an exothermic reaction that can heat water enough to burn on contact if...

The Ultimate Pool Route Start Checklist

Image
A pool service truck is more than transportation. It’s your mobile warehouse, your problem-solving kit, and the difference between finishing a route on time or losing hours to supply runs. A smart pool service startup checklist focuses on what you touch every day: core pool chemicals, reliable testing, and the small replacement parts that fail most often. Stocking liquid chlorine and muriatic acid in practical quantities keeps you ready for routine sanitizer demand and pH control, while calcium hypochlorite offers flexible shock power in a form you can transport or even leave with a customer when needed. Trichlor tablets belong with the customer, but keeping a bucket on the truck prevents emergencies when tablets run out unexpectedly. Adding diatomaceous earth supports proper DE filter backwash and recharge, which improves filtration and water clarity compared with “quick backwash” shortcuts.   A well-planned chemical lineup also includes purpose-built cleaners and lubricants ...

Surviving Extreme Heat on the Pool Route

Image
Running a pool service route during a summer heat wave is more than discomfort, it is a real safety and performance problem. When temperatures push past 100 degrees, your body struggles to regulate core temperature, and that affects focus, mood, and decision-making. For pool technicians, that can show up as slower stops, skipped steps, and higher risk of heat exhaustion or heat stroke. Smart pool maintenance in extreme heat starts with the basics: hydration, getting out of direct sun whenever possible, and accepting that fatigue is a normal physical response, not a motivation issue. If you plan for the heat instead of fighting it, you protect your health and keep service quality steady for customers.   The biggest “hidden” heat strategy is preventing the messy work that explodes in summer: algae. Brushing algae in full sun wastes time and energy and turns a normal weekly stop into a grind. The foundation is proactive filter cleaning before peak season, ideally in March or Apri...

Green Pool: The Hidden Problems You Need to Spot

Image
 Green pool cleanup jobs can grow a pool service business fast, but only if you treat them like a client screening tool, not a random hustle. The first step is qualifying the call before you ever drive out. Ask a simple question: why did the pool turn green? “I bought the house and it was like that” or “I tried and couldn’t fix it” usually signals a straightforward rescue. “My pool guy stopped coming” is a red flag that demands follow up about payment and expectations. This one question protects your schedule, your profit, and your reputation as a pool service pro. When you arrive to bid a green pool cleanup, read the whole property, not just the water color. A neglected yard, broken gates, peeling paint, and general disrepair often predict late payments, unrealistic demands, and future headaches. Even if you can win the green to blue battle, you still have to want the account afterward. Think like a route builder: the real win is adding a solid service customer to your pool route,...

Rainbow Chlorinator Tips and Tricks: Maintenance Made Simple

Image
Pentair Rainbow chlorinators are some of the most common tablet feeders on pool pads, and for good reason: they are reliable, familiar to pool service pros, and easy to keep running with basic maintenance. I prefer the Rainbow line over many alternatives because the design is serviceable in the real world, especially when you are moving fast on a route. The big rule that frames everything is tablet compatibility and safety. These are trichlor tablet chlorinators only. Never use cal-hypo tablets in a trichlor feeder, and never switch chemicals in an old unit with residue inside. Mixing trichlor and calcium hypochlorite can cause a violent reaction, including an explosion, and it is not worth the risk. There are two main styles you will see: the offline Pentair Rainbow 300 series (often recognized by the black tubing) and the inline Rainbow 320 series that is plumbed directly into the return line. I do not treat one as universally “better,” but they fail in different ways. Offline units ...

Pool Service Knowledge Vol 4: Real-World Fixes & Lessons

Image
Pool service is won or lost in the small details customers never notice, and “Pool Guy knowledge” is really about stacking tiny habits that prevent bigger failures. Start at the skimmer, because skimmer lids and skimmer baskets are constant touchpoints in weekly pool maintenance. In many backyards, the skimmer lid design creates a sheltered pocket that attracts spiders, including black widows in some regions. A quick visual check before you lift the lid is a real pool technician safety practice, not paranoia. From an operations angle, keeping common replacement skimmer lids on the truck also reduces emergency runs, and the lid itself often reveals the skimmer manufacturer when it still has the original branding. Skimmer basket performance is another overlooked source of recurring debris problems. Older locking skimmer baskets can jam, so swapping to a standard basket can save time and frustration on route work. Even with a normal basket, many float when the pump shuts off, creating a g...