Re: Danville's Pool

Originally Posted by
danville
Yes our testing kit only goes to 100 CYA, but the pool tech we consulted had a kit that went higher and he was the one he told us it was 150.
Sounds like we should go ahead and drain the pool. The pool is an inground concrete pool about 10 years old in a warm California climate. We are novices as this is our first pool - any advice on how to best drain the pool? Anything we need to look out for to avoid damaging the pool? Should we use a pressure washer once the pool is drained?
Unless, as Watermom said, you have a high water table, or it's rained heavily in recent weeks (it's certainly dry enough to drain a pool where I am, in Sacramento) it shouldn't be a problem.
You don't have to have a bottom drain if you're willing to rent or buy a light weight sump* pump (less than $90 at Home Depot, Lowes, etc.) If you have a pool equipment controller or pump timer, be sure these are in service mode or turned off. I wouldn't recommend leaving the pool in a drained state for more than a few days, just start filling right away -- multiple hoses will speed the process.
Not sure what power-washing would do for your pool -- other than risk plaster damage. If you have a mild algae condition, spend a few minutes on the algae stains with bleach and a bristle brush, then fill it up. Maintaining a higher-than-usual chlorine level and brushing once a day will eventually work to remove staining deposited by algae growth.
EDIT * I meant a submersible pump, not necessarily a sump pump. END-EDIT
Last edited by polyvue; 06-30-2010 at 03:03 PM.
Reason: Correct pump type nomenclature
16'x29' free-form 14K gal IG gunite pool; SWCG & sodium hypochlorite 8.25%; Hayward SwimClear C4025 cartridge filter; Hayward SP3202VSP TriStar Variable Speed Pool Pump; custom test kit based on Taylor K-2006C; city; PF:8.6
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