Sorry, can't do this till Wednesday of next week . . . maybe Waste or Waterbear can help.
Sorry, can't do this till Wednesday of next week . . . maybe Waste or Waterbear can help.
I am not in any rush. I don't plan on ordering or buying anything until Oct or Nov. Please give you input when you have time. Thanks Again, Kaya
Ok, but you'll have to remind me when the time comes -- things are likely to remain REAL busy till August.
Ben
Since you are in Louisiana, consider the salt-proof heating system: Solar!
Most, if not all the fittings are plastic and no more sensitive to salt than other plastic components.
Vinyl gets a bad rap but as Ben says, it's actually much lower maintenance than hard-sided pools. I know that sounds counter-intuitive, because concrete seems so permanent.
But concrete reacts with the water. When new and curing, it is very alkaline (after all, lime is a key ingredient in mortar, concrete and plaster). You have to maintain calcium levels in the water to prevent calcium carbonate from leaching out of the walls. Plus, about every 5 years you may well need to have the pool re-surfaced. That means draining the pool and, if you are in a wet ground area you must pump out the ground water around the pool or risk it floating, like a boat, out of the ground.
Vinyl, on the other hand can go 10 years or 20 years without replacement. I'm on Year 9 of a BAD install job and Poconos is on year 14 or 15 with his. You don't need calcium (unless the SWCG requires it) as there is little if any calcium in the vinyl, and what's there doesn't leach out to the best of our experience. Vinyl pools also tolerate a MUCH wider range of Total Alkalinity as well and are far cheaper to install.
The drawbacks to vinyl? Too high a chlorine level can fade them. Too low a pH can damage them. Pour Muriatic Acid in too fast so that it reaches the vinyl can melt the vinyl. Vinyl can be torn (Dogs are a no-no) And you can NEVER let the water level go below a foot in the shallowest area unless you are replacing the liner.
Heaters can be used with either type. SWCGs can be used with either. Waste, Waterbear and PoolSean can guide you better as to what heaters (other than solar) are compatible with SWCG systems.
As Ben pointed out, the WRONG fittings rust in salt pools. Simply make sure all metal fittings are salt-pool approved stainless steel. (Stainless steel comes in hundreds of grades depending on the application. A Buck hunting knife has very different requirements than a pool ladder. One must maintain an edge. The other must stand up to constant immersion, for example.)
Carl
Carl
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