Re: A-B-Cs of liner tucks
well..i'm honoured my stupidity with liners was an inspiration for your thread, waste:) jking:) having done the hairdryer trick and the hot water, i strongly recommend hot water if it's even necessary. too easy for a hair dryer to slip into the pool and hey, the hot water works like a charm:) my pool liner is very old so it was quite stiff before putting water on it. i also had to drop my water level about 4 inches..yep, that stuff. there was a comment i believe in the other thread about how a person could put liner locks in and take them out later. maybe for newer liners..not for mine. there just wasn't enough give and enough lip to hold the liner over the channel without it slipping back. i tried the penny trick, but my groove (not the channel, but the groove you would be facing was at least 2 pennies deep. the channel lock i've used both times (more successfully the 2nd as it was a bit thicker) is a wedge on the side that goes in. a few taps with a rubber mallet and it stays in nicely. really, it's done well for a 21 year old vinyl liner:)
Re: A-B-Cs of liner tucks
How big of a slip will this work on?
I have a section that looks to me to be to much to stretch. It's about 5" that is pulled out, but it is pulled down about 1". As I recall, the liner is about 4 years old.
Do I have a chance?
Re: A-B-Cs of liner tucks
Steve, I could have that back in in under 5 min! This assumes that the liner wasn't exposed to an 'acid bath' or 'nuked' with chlorine, and is under 15 yrs old.
For the larger 'slips', you need to work one side and then the other, though with a 4 yr old liner, you can probably just work it from 1 side.
Re: A-B-Cs of liner tucks
Once my guys get the liner heated up and popped back into place with liner lock, they immediately pour a bunch of cold water on the liner to cool it back down and stop it from unnecessarily stretching any more.
Brad
Waterworks Pools
Re: A-B-Cs of liner tucks
I had several places pop out on my beaded liner over the winter, Is it safe to take the top rail off while I am reinstalling the bead?
I assume that is the only way to get to it.
I have been taking two sections off at a time. but I am scared that it is going to collapse or something.
And when I put it back together I can't get the original screw holes to line up again. so I know it is moving a little.
I also am gonna use the penny idea I read on another post.
Re: A-B-Cs of liner tucks
Waste....this a great post, I must have missed it the first time you posted it! Just to add, I use a butter knife--it's duller than the screwdriver and thinner than the tongue depressor, and works very well. I had about a 1 1/2 foot section out when I came back from vacation this past weekend, with about a 3 inch sag at the lowest point. It took DH and I about 20 minutes to put it back in, but it's back now and just fine.
Janet
Re: A-B-Cs of liner tucks
I wouldn't think removing the top rail is a good idea because you need the pressure from the rail to keep what you've fixed in place. Don't know though--I just figured the less I take apart, the easier the fix is! :)
Janet
Re: A-B-Cs of liner tucks
Maybe, I'm calling the wrong thing a rail. I don't know what I'm talking about 1/2 the time.
I'm referring to the wide pieces that are about 4 feet long that sit on top of the side wall. I can't get to the top of my liner without removing them.
Re: A-B-Cs of liner tucks
Danl, you can remove the top rail to better expose the track - a lot of times you absolutely HAVE to to gain the access you need. If you are doing multiple 'liner tucks', replace as much as you can before proceeding to the next one - some of them may require having 2 off at a time, because it falls at an upright (I'm assuming that we are talking about an AG pool)
As a tip on reinstalling the top rail, don't fully tighten any of the screws down all the way until all 4 screws are started and the rail sits in it's proper position:cool:
Thank you Janet:D !