Cal-Hypo and Black Pool Stains: Bob Lowry Explains
Clear blue water hides a lot of chemistry. In this conversation with industry legend Bob Lowry, we trace two common pain points that can rattle even seasoned pool techs: sudden black stains after dosing with calcium hypochlorite and the real health stakes when a pool slips to zero chlorine. The black stain scare can feel like a catastrophe, but it’s usually copper revealing itself, not a new problem. Copper sulfate can sit quietly on plaster, masked by the blue of the water. The instant cal hypo lands on it, oxidation shifts the compound to copper oxide, which is black and obvious. What changed isn’t the metal load, only its form—and that insight reshapes how we fix it. Once you confirm a metal stain, you have options. Ascorbic acid can lift the stain from surfaces, but it doesn’t remove copper from the system. Without metal removal, the stain returns as soon as chlorine wipes out the reducer. That’s where sequestrants and chelants come in: they surround dissolved metal and keep it fro...