Recurring rust, iron, or corrosion-linked spots usually need source-water or metal treatment, not acid first.
Color, source, and first move
Use the matrix to match the stain color and refill history to the safest next step.
Hard crust and rough white buildup point toward scale or tile-line cleanup before deeper stain work.
Organic staining and residue should be sorted before any aggressive treatment order starts.
Use the stain atlas and compatibility matrix before acid-washing or brushing across mixed finishes.
Stains, Metals, and Discoloration
Not every stain is algae, and not every discoloration should be hit with chlorine or acid.
- Not every stain is algae, and not every discoloration should be hit with chlorine or acid.
- Free Chlorine
- pH
- Calcium Hardness
- Do not acid wash simply because a stain is visible.
Classify the stain as organics, scale, or metals before choosing a treatment.
- ✕Do not acid wash as a first response
- ✕Do not SLAM metal staining as if it were algae
Free Chlorine / pH / Calcium Hardness
Classify the symptom first
The first question is whether you are looking at scale, organics, or dissolved metals depositing on the finish.
Rule out organics and scale
Organic staining and scale can mimic metals, but the treatment order is different.
Use targeted treatment order
Once you are confident it is metals, treatment should be staged carefully.
Protect the surface
Surface type changes how aggressive you can be.
- Do not acid wash simply because a stain is visible.
Escalate when the source is unclear
A stain that keeps returning usually means the source is still active.
الموارد (2)
Photo-Driven Stain Identification Helper
Use the photo helper when you want a visual first-pass before choosing a stain treatment.
Source water and refill water
Use the source-water guide when the stain keeps returning after refills or top-offs.
Educational guidance only. Verify labels, manuals, local code, and site conditions before acting. Stop for electrical, gas, structural, drain, drowning, injury, emergency, or chemical-mixing risk.