Seasonal & Climate
लोड पथ

मलबा मौसम शाखाएं

रसायन डालने या सफाई का क्रम तय करने से पहले प्रमुख मलबा शाखा चुनें।

पराग धुंध

इस लोड को पहले फिल्ट्रेशन दबाव की तरह देखें, हरे पानी की समस्या की तरह नहीं।

पत्तों का गिरना

बड़ा जैविक भार पहले हटाएं, इससे पहले कि वह प्रवाह और सैनिटाइज़र को कमज़ोर करे।

तूफ़ानी अवशेष

जब बहाव या बाढ़ का अवशेष सफाई बदल दे, तो संदूषण पथ पर जाएँ।

मौसमी पैटर्न

जब मलबे का भार कैलेंडर से अधिक स्थानीय वातावरण का पालन करे, तब जलवायु मार्गदर्शिका का उपयोग करें।

Debris Season Management

Handle pollen surges, leaf fall, and organic debris loads before they overwhelm sanitizer demand and filtration.

Use this when
  • Handle pollen surges, leaf fall, and organic debris loads before they overwhelm sanitizer demand and filtration.
You'll need
  • FC
  • CYA
  • pH
Stop and escalate if
  • Do not keep dumping shock into a pool that is mainly overloaded with leaves or pollen.
पहले यह करें

Skim and remove the bulk debris before testing or dosing. A heavy debris load skews every chemistry result.

यह न करें
  • Do not dump shock into a pool that is mainly overloaded with leaves or pollen
  • Do not add clarifier before the debris is physically removed
तैयार रखें

FC / CYA / pH

0%0/18 done
1

Classify the debris regime

Start by naming the seasonal pattern before you change the chemistry.

2

Remove the big load first

The fastest way to reduce demand is to get the bulk material out of the water.

3

Treat fine pollen as filtration demand

Pollen behaves more like a recurring filter load than an immediate algae diagnosis.

Warnings
  • Do not keep dumping shock into a pool that is mainly overloaded with leaves or pollen.
4

Separate tint from stain from algae

Brown or yellow water after a debris event is not automatically an algae problem.

5

Prevent the same load from returning

Seasonal debris management is mostly about reducing repeat pressure.

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.

Terms