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  1. #1
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    Default Re: The Pool Hunt Has Begun...

    Quote Originally Posted by CarlD View Post
    If all you want is a softer "feel" to the water you can get that far easier just by adding sufficient salt to your water--no SWCG required!. Home Depot sells 40# bags of Morton swimming pool salt for under $8/bag. Even 10 bags is less than $80...and will give you the "feel" without spending $800-$1600 on an SWCG system.

    The SWCG is simply to generate chlorine from breaking the Sodium Chloride (salt) into chlorine. It doesn't save you money but it can keep your pool chlorinated for far longer without adding anything.

    Generally, the thicker the liner the better, and 20mils is the absolute thinnest liner you should get. 25mils or 30mils will be tougher and stronger.

    I think buying pools from local dealers is a lot like buying cars....
    I had no idea you could do that! Just add salt to the BBB treatment to get that salt water feel? Ok. We don't travel a lot, so I don't think I'll have a problem staying on top of the chlorine and keeping it regulated.

    Is there a guide that lists horsepower of pump and size of filter for X number of gallons? Also, should the installer use a certain size pipe to get better flow?

    Thanks for the info. It's very much appreciated!
    Rhonda

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    CarlD's Avatar
    CarlD is offline SuperMod Emeritus Vortex Adjuster CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars CarlD 4 stars
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    Default Re: The Pool Hunt Has Begun...

    Yup, just add pool salt, not sea salt or water softener salt.

    Matching pumps to filters to plumbing is a bit of an art, but you want your filter's capacity to always be greater than your pump's or your filter will fail faster.

    With an ordinary round or oval Above Ground pool, standard 1.5" PVC and TigerFlex will be fine. TigerFlex is flexible PVC but if you don't want it to leak, you must use it with glue-on Schedule 40 fittings just like hard PVC. Barbed fittings designed to go inside hoses WILL fail and leak if used with TigerFlex, no matter how many hose clamps you use.
    Carl

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    Default Re: The Pool Hunt Has Begun...

    just to give you some perspective ----- I used to have a 24ft AG pool and now I have a 27ft AG. When it was time to replace my pump several years back, Poconos (used to be one of the other moderators here on the forum) picked out which one I should buy because he was more knowledgeable about that than me. He selected a 1/2hp full-rated inground pump for my AG pool and it is plenty powerful enough. Inground pumps are generally more sturdy than AG pumps are and are self-priming which is wonderful. (Sometimes AG pumps are a hassle to get and keep primed.) I have it paired with a 300lb sand filter.

    (We OFTEN see AG pools with pumps that are too big paired with sand filters that are too small and the pump simply forces debris through the sand bed giving virtually no filtering.)

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    Pappy is offline PF Supporter Widget Weaver Pappy 0
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    Default Re: The Pool Hunt Has Begun...

    Quote Originally Posted by Rhonda_M View Post
    Is there a guide that lists horsepower of pump and size of filter for X number of gallons? Also, should the installer use a certain size pipe to get better flow?

    Thanks for the info. It's very much appreciated!
    Rhonda
    http://poolsolutions.com/gd/above-gr...-problems.html

    The "Mismatched pumps and filters" is a good read. We just converted from a little Intex cartridge to a .75hp Intex sand filter. It works well and cleans the pool SO much better, but I wish we'd bought the .5 hp model.

    Pappy
    Intex 15ftx4ft 4500 gal. 3/4 HP Pentair WhisperFlo pump. Hayward 21" sand filter. Taylor K-2006 & K-1106 kits. PF=27

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    Default Re: The Pool Hunt Has Begun...

    New question: We have been quoted a price on a pool we like and are starting to look at electricians. Any idea on a price tag for the electrician bill in Middle Tennessee? Pool will be about 40 feet from house.

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    CarlD's Avatar
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    Default Re: The Pool Hunt Has Begun...

    No one can say. It depends on the work done and what he runs and where. If lines have to be buried, it will require digging or a ditch-witch. When I did mine, I could run the conduit under the deck, but still it had to be routed back to a 220v GFCI breaker in the box, plus the timer. And, of course, banding the pool, pump, and ladders.
    Carl

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    Default Re: The Pool Hunt Has Begun...

    Try to find a licensed electrician with pool experience. When you talk to them before you hire, ask what they'll do, let them tell you about bonding and fault protection.
    12'x24' oval 7.7K gal AG vinyl pool; ; Hayward S270T sand filter; Hayward EcoStar SP3400VSP pump; hrs; K-2006; PF:16

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