15 x 30 oval here. Love it. A friend has a 28' round pool, and as nice as it is I really like the oval better. Like you said being longer it gives you the room to do laps.
15 x 30 oval here. Love it. A friend has a 28' round pool, and as nice as it is I really like the oval better. Like you said being longer it gives you the room to do laps.
I have a small 18' round, it is fine for now, but eventually I want either an inground or else a larger above ground. I like the rectangle pools for the above ground ones, and I would especially like for it to have a deeper end. I would like a something like 40' long, and as wide as possible.
My personal opinion is that anything you can do in a round pool you can do in an oval of the same length. But the oval has far less water: consider a 33' pool, with a true depth of 4'. A 33' round will cover 855 square feet and hold 25,600 gallons of water. A 33'x18' oval will take up 524 square feet and hold 15,700 gallons. Less chemicals, less to filter, less yard eaten up, easier to cover with a solar cover and a winter cover, but still 33' long so you have ALL the advantages of the round.
Carl
Hi, Oval pools are little more expensive and a lot harder to install but I have to agree with Carl, they are a better value in the long run. Having had many different sizes I would have to say my current 15 x 30 is perfect. Big enough for swimming laps but managable cleaning wise. Just the right pool for me.
Dennis
AG pool installer
Arizona
I agree with Carl too. I have a 15X30 oval AG with a 6' deep end. It seems like a really big pool to me. I'm fighting algae right now and I'm glad I don't have any more water to treat. It was a pain to set up. But I really like it.
But if you can, a rectangular A/G is, IMHO, much nicer. I have a 40' long rectangular and you can swim laps, and don't have to seek the long points of the pool.
However there seem to be only 2 kinds of A/G rectangulars--really, really inexpensive, like Intex, or really, really expensive like Splash, FantaSea or Kayak.
Carl
Hey guys - there is nothing wrong with a round pool. Also, I think structurally they are stronger than an oval because the water pressure is exerted equally on all parts of the pool wall. Thus, no need for buttresses which in my opinion, don't look very good in your yard, and are a pain to mow around.
BTW - You know you're gonna get multiple answers to this question. It's generally gonna be whatever people have is what they are gonna recommend. Kind of like the "what is the better type of filter - de, sand, cartridge - debate!"
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