Posts

Pool Safety Alert: Chemical Hazards You Must Know

Image
Pool chemicals keep water clear and safe, but their power cuts both ways. When certain products meet in a bucket, skimmer, feeder, or closed shed, they can create toxic gases, violent reactions, or long-term damage you cannot undo. The harsh truth is that chlorine and acid, trichlor and cal hypo, or clarifiers with sequestering agents do not simply “cancel out.” They interact. Sometimes the result is invisible lung injury; other times it is an eruption that shatters lids and melts equipment. Understanding the why behind these reactions gives you the confidence to prevent them and the language to teach customers what “no mixing” really means. Trichlor deserves special attention. Water plus trichlor in a sealed bucket or inline feeder can release a choking fume strong enough to drop a healthy adult. Inline feeders that trap water with a stuck check valve are prime culprits, as are floaters caked with residue. Keep your face away when opening any unknown trichlor container, and never park...

Lose a Few, Earn More: Smart Pricing Strategy

Image
Raising prices is one of the most direct ways to grow profit, yet it can feel like walking a tightrope when you manage a service route with loyal clients. The core question is less about if prices should go up and more about how to do it without breaking trust. We explore two practical paths: a firm but fair increase across all accounts, or a softer opt-in approach that invites customers to accept the new rate. Both strategies respect the reality of rising wages, distributor costs, and travel time. The key is to pair your decision with clear language, a timeline, and math that proves even modest increases move the needle on yearly income while keeping service quality steady. One smart tool is an “optional” increase letter that frames the rise as a request, not a mandate. The message acknowledges inflation, explains why wages must keep pace to retain great technicians, and invites the client to accept a set monthly bump with no action required. If they decline, service continues at the ...

Calcium Buildup: The Truth About Pool Tile Scale

Image
 White scale creeping along the waterline and across spa spillways is one of the most common surprises for pool owners and a steady headache for service pros. The culprit is mineral saturation meeting heat and evaporation, leaving calcium behind on tile, stone, and glass. Understanding how and why it forms is the key to choosing the right fix. Scale appears fast on new builds in hard-water areas because early water balance swings are common. When the Langelier Saturation Index tilts scale-forming from high pH, high alkalinity, or high calcium hardness, minerals “fall out” and plate onto hot, wet tile as water evaporates. Spa spillways, constantly wet and sunlit, become the showcase. Not all white is equal. A quick, careful acid test helps sort it out. Spritz a small patch with diluted muriatic acid and watch. Fizzing suggests calcium carbonate, which is relatively easier to remove; no reaction points to calcium silicate, which is stubborn and often demands professional bead blastin...

Pool Service Knowledge Every Tech Should Know – Vol 2

Image
 Field experience turns mystery into method, and few trades prove that more than pool service. We open with a simple truth: many issues don’t show up in training manuals, and search results can’t replace the intuition that comes from solving problems on site. Take the offline chlorinator, for example. When tablets sit dry and refuse to dissolve, technicians often chase water chemistry ghosts when the real danger is a pressurized chamber gassing off harsh fumes. The safe move is to approach the lid from the side, crack it slowly, and expect vapor. Then fix the cause: the clogged check valve elbow with the tiny BB inside. Swap it for a new one and the flow returns. This isn’t theory; it’s a $7 solution that prevents callbacks and protects your lungs. The chlorinator offers two more lessons. First, the black tubing lives in the sun, turns brittle, and becomes an invisible siphon that can drain a pool below the skimmer and beyond if it splits. Make a quick bend test part of your monthl...

War, Oil Prices, and Your Pool Route

Image
The pool service trade sits at a strange crossroads when the economy slows. We feel every shock in fuel and freight, yet we’re protected by the simple truth that clean, safe water takes time, skill, and consistent care. When oil rises, distributors pay more to move chemicals, equipment, and parts. That cost moves to your supplier, then straight to your invoice. You can’t absorb it and survive. The smart move is to align your pricing with reality before you bleed margin, while keeping client trust by being clear, steady, and measured in how you adjust. History helps. In 2008, housing collapsed and builders vanished under leverage. COVID was different: demand spiked and stimulus masked the pain, but shortages and panic buying drove inflation anyway. Today’s pressure sits in logistics. Fuel hits every pallet and delivery, so chemical prices rarely retreat once they climb. That stickiness is why waiting for prices to fall is a gamble. You can buy ahead for summer if cash flow allows, but d...

Bottom Feeder vs Shrimp: Which Pool Vacuum Wins?

Image
 If you’re a pool service pro trying to pick a cordless pool vacuum that truly fits your pool route, the choice between the Bottom Feeder and the Shrimp Cleaner comes down to how you actually clean day to day. Both are designed as independent, battery-powered vacuum systems that you can drop into a pool or spa without cords, plugs, or a separate pump setup, which is the real advantage: speed. The Bottom Feeder has built a reputation as the pro-grade benchmark because it’s built from aluminum with serious components and strong thrust, so light debris in a 15,000-gallon pool can be handled in just a few minutes. That kind of time savings matters when you’re moving stop to stop and trying to protect your schedule, your body, and your profit. Physical size and handling are the next decision points. The Bottom Feeder is compact for what it is, but the Shrimp Cleaner is noticeably smaller and lighter, which changes how it feels on steps, benches, spas, fountains, and tight corners. A sma...

Microns & PPM: The Invisible World Inside Your Pool

Image
Precision keeps pools clear, efficient, and safe, yet most confusion comes down to two tiny measurements: microns and parts per million. Microns tell us what size particles a filter or cleaner can catch, while PPM tells us how much chemical exists in a huge body of water. When you link both, cloudy water and over-chlorination myths fade fast. A micron is one millionth of a meter; human hair is about 70 microns, a grain of salt near 100. This scale matters because your filter’s rating determines what actually stays in the pool or gets removed. Sand filters typically capture 25 to 30 microns, cartridge 10 to 20, and DE 1 to 3, which is why DE yields the sharpest clarity. Since the human eye can only see down to roughly 35 microns, much of what irritates owners is invisible until the right filtration grabs it. That truth reframes expectations: if you run sand, you will not polish out fine silt the way a DE system does. Vacuum system bags and robotic canisters bring microns to the deck lev...