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Showing posts from April, 2026

Bottom Feeder Cartridge: Dirt Gone in Minutes!

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Pool service pros are always looking for pool cleaning equipment that saves time without sacrificing results, and the biggest pain point is fine dirt that slips right through most vacuum bags. The Bottom Feeder and Shrimp Cleaner cartridge filter adapter aims straight at that problem by turning a battery-powered pool vacuum system into a true dirt-filtering machine. After months of real route use, the big win is practical: you can drop the cleaner in, vacuum like normal, and capture particles down to roughly 10 to 20 microns. That level of micron filtration is the difference between “looks better” and “water is dialed in,” especially when dust, silt, or dead algae keeps returning to the pool. A lot of skepticism comes from earlier cartridge-style add-ons that were awkward, leaky, or simply not effective enough to become an everyday tool. Low-micron vacuum bags help, but they have tradeoffs. Fine bags clog fast, coat over, restrict flow, and can tear easily when they snag on sharp edges...

Wait… Is This Normal in Your Pool?

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Pool owners often ask the same question in different ways: what’s normal in pool water, and what signals trouble. The hard part is that clear, blue water can still have problems that don’t show up until the chemistry collapses. A classic example is chlorine that drops to zero in 24 hours. That can be normal during summer, but only when you understand the relationship between free chlorine and cyanuric acid (CYA). If CYA is high, the pool needs a higher free chlorine level to stay protected. Add in intense sun and UV index, and a “normal” looking pool can burn through a low chlorine residual fast, especially while invisible microalgae is starting to grow. When chlorine seems to vanish, don’t assume the product is bad. Start with the basics of pool maintenance testing: verify CYA, then dose free chlorine appropriately so sanitation keeps up with demand. Also consider hidden chlorine consumers like high phosphate levels, which many standard test kits don’t measure. Phosphates over roughly...

Quick & Easy Pool Skimming Hacks You Need

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Heavy surface debris is more than a nuisance; it’s a chain reaction that steals time, strains systems, and clouds water. When leaves blanket the surface, techs spend extra minutes skimming, debris sinks and stalls cleaners, and full skimmer baskets choke flow. That drop in circulation invites algae, raises chemical demand, and frustrates customers who expect a clear pool after every visit. The fix starts with keeping debris at the surface and moving it into capture zones before it sinks. We walk through field-tested solutions, focusing on tools that operate continuously between service visits, so the water stays moving and the basket stays breathing. The first workhorse is a return-line secondary skimmer, commonly known as the PoolSkim. It threads into a 1.5-inch return, sets at the waterline, and creates a gentle draw through a floating weir into a mesh bag. On heavy-leaf pools, this alone can stop the weekly “basket brick” effect and keep surfaces clean. Installation matters: multipl...