Suit yourself.
An SWCG will work if you can get it hooked up. Personally, on doughnut pool, I'd use a trichlor floater to cover the 3 days you're away, and save the SWCG money for the replacement pool.
Suit yourself.
An SWCG will work if you can get it hooked up. Personally, on doughnut pool, I'd use a trichlor floater to cover the 3 days you're away, and save the SWCG money for the replacement pool.
Thanks - the three days don't worry me too much, it's more a bunch of upcoming travel. Since you're clearly not a fan of our silly pool (and I say that because I think it's silly too!), what would you do to manage it with some upcoming travel? We'll be gone four days, then back about a week, and then gone another week.
If we go for a more permanent pool, it's likely to be in-ground, and in our neck of the woods, I'm sure it's at least 50k. It's gonna be awhile before we will save that up!
There's a huge jump in reliability between the Easy Set, and the Ultra series. But you can get even the largest Ultra - which is larger than many in-grounds - for less than $2,000. Small round pools, similar in size to the Easy Sets can be had for less than $600. From what we've seen, Easy Sets rarely make it more than one season, and often don't last the season without multiple patches on the doughnut.
What I'm trying to say is, if you leave your pool for 4 - 7 days, you're likely to come back to a pile of wet vinyl, in which case chlorine levels will be the least of your problems.
Still, if you want to try, a trichlor feeder is your best bet.
Ladders? As far as I know, a sturdy ladder for an Easy Set is a roll-you-own sort of affair.
Ok, so it sounds like you're saying that since the doughnut could have a problem. We shouldn't set the filter to run (since it would burn up). Obviously, we shouldn't upgrade the gear, we should just cover it and leave it? If it's busts while were away, it will leave a muddy mess but won't hurt anything else.
I don't have any desire to preemptively drain 5000 gallons of water.
Then, basically wait for this pool to die with current equipment, and replace with a totally new set up when it does.
Yeah, if you have a cover, and can maintain the water while you're there, and cover it while you're gone, that would be a practical solution, I think. Pretty low maintenance, too.
Just don't make the mistake of forgetting to chlorinate fully when you arrive, and then trying to 'catch up' right before you leave. When chlorine burns up goo (mostly, people goo), it produces intermediate compounds that are broken down by chlorine + sun. If wait, and dose right before you leave, those some of those intermediate compounds will go to forms volatile halogen gas forms, accumulate under your cover, damage it, and then stink like crazy when you pull the cover off.
So, add your big chlorine doses when you arrive, and not when you leave.
Gotcha - thanks for clarifying, as I had read to dose 4x chlorine. So now, I won't and instead will just deal with the chlorine when we return.
What about the chlor tabs we have floating?
My experience with Intex donut was different - ours served our family for three seasons and my neighbors for two. It met it's end over the winter in my neighbor's storage shed. Apparently, mice like to eat vinyl. My experience is probably beyond the norm, we were very careful in use and in storage. The risk of pool failure for us would have been wiping out our neighbor's garden.
12'x24' oval 7.7K gal AG vinyl pool; ; Hayward S270T sand filter; Hayward EcoStar SP3400VSP pump; hrs; K-2006; PF:16
Bookmarks