Sodium Hypochlorite Solution - 4x1 Gallon Cases - NSF Sodium Hypochlorite Solution - 4x1 Gallon Cases - NSF Water Treatment Chemical Supplier, Ice Melt Distributor, Pool Chemical Supplier

Sodium Hypochlorite Solution - 4x1 Gallon Cases - NSF
LC-4 NSF

Pallet Weight: 2081
Pallet Quantity: 48
By the Pallet
  Sodium Hypochlorite NSF/ANSI Standard 60 Certificate of Compliance
  Buckman's Sodium Hypo SDS
  Sodium Hypochlorite Spec Sheet
  LC4-NSF-high-resolution

In the water purification and swimming pool industry, Sodium Hypochlorite offers powerful disinfection and oxidation properties. You’ll find our hypo to be unmatched in its quality and effectiveness. 

 

DIRECTIONS FOR USE

It is a violation of Federal law to use this product in a manner inconsistent with its labeling.

Note: This product degrades with age. Use a chlorine test kit and increase dosage, as necessary, to obtain the required level of available chlorine. This product may be applied only by the methods specified on the labeling.

Used For Swimming Pool Water Disinfection

For a new pool or spring start up, superchlorinate with 52 to 104 fl oz of product for each 10,000 gallons of water to yield 5 to 10 ppm available chlorine by weight. Check the level of available chlorine with a test kit. Adjust and maintain pool water pH to between 7.2 to 7.6. Adjust and maintain the alkalinity of the pool to between 50 to 100 ppm.

To maintain the pool, add manually or by a feeder device, 11 fl oz of this product for each 10,000 gallons of water to yield an available chlorine residual between 0.6 to 1.0 ppm by weight. Stabilized pools should maintain a residual of 1.0 to 1.5 ppm available chlorine. Test the pH, available chlorine residual and alkalinity of the water frequently with appropriate test kits.

Frequency of water treatment will depend upon temperature and number of swimmers. Every 7 days, or as necessary, superchlorinate the pool with 52 to 104 fl oz of product for each 10,000 gallons of water to yield 5 to 10 ppm available chlorine by weight. Check the level of available chlorine with a test kit. Do not reenter pool until the chlorine residual is between 1.0 to 3.0 ppm. Re-entry into treated pools is prohibited above levels of 4 ppm due to risk of bodily harm. At the end of the swimming pool season or when water is to be drained from the pool, chlorine must be allowed to dissipate from treated pool water before discharge. Do not chlorinate the pool within 24 hours prior to discharge.