Gonna try and cut it up tomorrow I think. I've just been draping it over the pool and spa so far. Temps have gone up a few degrees despite a cold front coming through yesterday (84 water temp now). Chlorine is definitely staying in the water longer; I turned down the swcg to 50% before starting with the cover and 2 days later I've gone from 8ppm to 16. Still within the normal range for 60 cya I think, but you can smell the chlorine a little now. Previously I'd have had to add liquid chlorine to get it that high!
I'm happy about the temp change, that's for sure but it's a little bit of a hassle especially since I'm a bit freaked out about the dangers of kids and a cover. Went out and got alarms for the back door and gates to the yard. Once summer hits full on I'll probably stop using it because I don't get to run out and skim the pool while I'm on the phone working (that's a pleasant diversion in my day usually). Still, it's serving it's purpose now and I can look forward to swimming much later in the year now!
You can cut the cover into pieces instead of one big piece. That will help with the concern about kids and a cover. I have my solar cover cut into fourths on my 24 AG. It is also much easier to manage than one huge piece of vinyl.
Interesting note to cut up a large cover. I have an odd shaped pool, so I was thinking I'd need to buy a much larger solar cover in order to cut it to shape to fit in as 1 piece. Plus with a reel it seemed I would catch the cover on the curves of the pool as I reeled it in. And of course buying a reel is even more cost!
For those who cut up a large cover, how or where do you store it when you're in the pool (since I assume you can't use a reel)? I also have a vinyl safety fence around the pool; will it be easy or light to pull the cover out? What prevents the pieces from moving around and overlapping?
Finally, how would this compare to buying the solar disks? Although you'd have more gaps between the solar disks, it seems that the benefit is easier storage.
My 24ft AG cover is cut into fourths. Each piece is rolled onto a long piece of pvc pipe and then lifted out and stacked on the side of the deck out of the way. Much easier to manage than that huge piece of vinyl!
Bookmarks