Zero free chlorine is not a small problem, it’s the moment a pool can start compounding into cloudiness, chloramines, and an algae bloom. We break down what’s really happening when a pool “zeroes out,” why filtration can suddenly struggle, and how to bring sanitizer back fast without guessing and hoping for the best. We start with the must-have testing mindset: total chlorine, free chlorine, and combined chlorine (chloramines). Once you know your combined chlorine level, breakpoint chl...

Show Notes

Zero free chlorine is not a small problem, it’s the moment a pool can start compounding into cloudiness, chloramines, and an algae bloom. We break down what’s really happening when a pool “zeroes out,” why filtration can suddenly struggle, and how to bring sanitizer back fast without guessing and hoping for the best. 

We start with the must-have testing mindset: total chlorine, free chlorine, and combined chlorine (chloramines). Once you know your combined chlorine level, breakpoint chlorination stops being a mystery and becomes a repeatable process. We also explain why under-dosing shock can actually make a chloramine problem worse, and why many pros intentionally overshoot breakpoint in the real world to account for heavy organic load, microalgae, and the “negative chlorine demand” that eats new chlorine immediately. 

From there, we get practical about recovery tactics that actually move the needle: cleaning or backwashing the filter so the system can clear cloudy water, choosing smart helpers like phosphate remover and enzymes, and being cautious with products like PoolRx when chlorine is elevated. We also cover the aftercare that saves your week: longer pump run times for better circulation and a planned midweek check so the pool doesn’t crash back to zero before the weekend. 

• common reasons chlorine hits zero on a route
• why zero chlorine often means combined chlorine
• using total chlorine and free chlorine to calculate chloramines
• breakpoint chlorination math and why under-dosing backfires
• why we err on the side of overkill
• the “negative chlorine” idea and what drives chlorine demand
• when to use phosphate remover and enzymes
• cautions with PoolRx at high chlorine
• adding borates only after balancing pH and alkalinity
• backwashing DE and sand filters for faster recovery
• cleaning cartridge filters to speed up clearing
• planning a midweek return visit to hold chlorine
• running the pump longer for better circulation

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