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Super-flock sounds like a settling agent used to drop suspended particles out of water in a swimming pool. Usually in a pool, it's added with pump running, then you shut off the pump overnight and it settles particles(like dirt, dead or live algae, etc) to the bottom. Not the right stuff. Is it labeled for us in a spa?Should just rely on the larger stain and scale dose, and give it time to go back into solution. Do not super-chlorinate or super-oxidize until it is back in solution. You can go to the next Step and use SparkleUp (by bioguard). It's a wood pulp dirivative that coats your spa filter and works with the stain and scale control to remove it from the water.
silly reminder, but......one chemical at a time.....then wait for a couple/few hours to let the chemical do "its thing" before adding anything else......I recall this post someone made about adding stain/scale, chlorine and something else(??) that made the water turn into goo.....
that was a good experiment......seems that you have at least an answer, but now you cannot use chlorine? So if mineral oxidation is the issue, what if you added stain/scale stuff FIRST? Or would bromine be a thing to try instead? Doesn't seem advisable to rely on just MPS for sanitation, from what I have learned here.
Well, I put the product in there, and it hasnīt reacted to normal dichlor usage. The No Scale product is, from what I've gathered, a similar product.