Hi Lady;
Well, it could be worse. You could have algae, too. To be fair to the pool store, your's is a hard pool to deal with.
Having been fair, I'm going to tell you: DO NOT TRUST THEIR ADVICE ANYMORE! Don't burn your bridges; just get your water tested, smile sweetly, and say "Maybe next time", when they try to dump all that stuff on you.
#1 - Get a cheap OTO / phenol red test kit (Walmart, or whereever)
#2 - Turn your pump on, and leave it on 24/7 till you are ALL cleaned up.
#3 - Starting tomorrow EVENING, add 2 gallons of bleach each evening, unless levels are above 4 ppm.
#4 - Starting tomorrow MORNING, add directly to the pool 2 quarts of muriatic acid (gloves, glasses, watch the fumes) at a time, wait an hour, and retest.
#5 - Keep your chlorine above 1 in the AM, but don't add more stabilizer yet.
#6 - Keep adding acid till your pH goes just below 7.0, and then stop.
#7 - Test chlorine 1 hour after bleach additions and again in the AM, no later than 2 hours after sunrise.
#8 - Order a K2006 or K2006C -- Amazon link below -- and report results once you have it. Don't over test CYA -- 2006 only contains 3 - 4 CYA tests.
#9 - See if your pool store will test your fill water for iron -- 0.08ppm does NOT sound high enough for your problems.
#10 - If you start to see any algae, add polyquat-60 algaecide. (Also will help slightly with filtration.)
Regarding stains in acrylic -- I wouldn't hold my breath till they are removed. More likely, you'll need to remove the acrylic and recoat with epoxy . . . but not this season. (There may be some epoxies now that can go on top of acrylic.)
Regarding your well, and iron: water discolored by iron is usually orange or orange-brown or maybe brown. Black is manganese, which can be present in well water. Are you sure it's iron?
Finally, most of the time, I tell people some version of "It won't be that hard, once you get the hang of it.". But I'm not going to tell you that -- metal contaminated well water is hard to deal with, and if you've got manganese, it's really, really hard. You need to understand that none of the 'metal removers' do -- all they do is redissolve the metals, but ONLY for awhile.
The ONLY way to remove iron is with a zeolite (softener, NOT zeolite filter media) OR by persuading the metals to precipitate on your filter, but not on your pool (stains!).
Regardless, start with the list above, and go from there. If you are careful, you can probably work out a way to operate your pool fairly trouble free -- you just won't have much room for error.
Ben
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