Your a life saver matt....thanks
May hit you up w/ more ? s later. Going to "pool school" today so they SHOULD help. They have been #$@@ poor so far. Only out to make $$. Thank God for Pool Forum.
Your a life saver matt....thanks
May hit you up w/ more ? s later. Going to "pool school" today so they SHOULD help. They have been #$@@ poor so far. Only out to make $$. Thank God for Pool Forum.
Does anyone have any input on the motor itself ? Do you cover it ?
Thanks
if outside, i would cover it, but with something that won't cause condensation and potential rust of any metal in/on the motor. for sure don't tight plastic wrap it. all you're really concerned about is moisture not getting into "dry" areas like the motor itself..i would probably use burlap if it's for snow protection?
I would not leave the pump motor outside - period - if water gets in, and then freezes, it expands and can wreck the armature and windings, if you MUST leave it outside, then cover it with something breathable, AND make some sort of box out of plywood to stand over the motor (like a mini motor shed) to keep the moisture off it as much as possible.
Here is my "plan"......feedback wanted.
I plan to thoroughly vacuum and clean the pool (although is is crystal clear now minus some dirt and a couple of leaves). After that I plan t backwash the filter for several minutes, rinse and shut down power. I have bought a skimmer box cover w/ gasket and I am going to buy a plug for the aqualuminator. Then I plan to put the filter to winterize and disconnect hoses from skimmer and to return. Place 4 x 15 air pillow inside pool tied to sides of pool on both ends to hold in the center of the pool(oh and steps and pad will be out). Place solid winter cover over pool and air pillow and tighten winch. Then I intend have had the filter draining as well as the pump. I want to try to leave hoses to the pump, from the pump to the filter top and from the filter top fastened if it's not too big of a h***el. I plan to take the top of the filter along with the pump into the garage for winter storage. Cover the filter w/ a small tarp and tighten around the base(IS THIS STEP OK) or should it be a bit loose to prevent condensation? The main components will be stored indoors.
Also, can pool chemicals and chlorine sticks be left in a garage? Stabilizer/etc or will cold winter weather harm the chemical makeup?
Your filter should have a drain plug on the bottom, take it out after backwashing, you won't have to set to "Winterize" if you're taking the multiport inside.
When tarping, you can bungee or tie it around the bottom, but keep it above the drain plug so it can still drain without getting inside the tarp. Condensation won't matter, even if it freezes, it's a plastic housing (likely rotomolded), and it would take a lot more than a little condensation to do any damage.
You should be able to take all the hoses connected together inside at once with two people doing it, (one carry pump, teh other the multi port, let the rest dangle) I can haul mine into my trailer alone and get it from there to the shelf inside alone as well, but I would not recommend doing so if you're walking from pool to house.
Place all loose bolts and plugs inside your pump strainer.
I have quick disconnects at each shutoff valve (skimmer and return) which makes it really easy to disconnect my hoses in one shot, then I just leave the shutoffs open - do that as well, in case there is a slight leak from one of your covers/plugs, otherwise water will build up in the short line to the shutoff and burst something.
I've never had any issues keeping chemicals in the garage, they have a shelf life, but I believe cold actually helps lengthen that.
I live in Northern Alabama, and we do get below freezing from time to time, but never for extended periods. I had intended to just set the filter to "winterize", drain it, and cover it. Is there really any reason to take the top off if winters here are just not that extreme?
Just drain the filter and cover it. Don't dump the sand--it's not necessary and if you aren't careful you could damage the laterals.
I still have the same sand after 4 seasons and never dumped it.
Here's why I don't worry about algae: This week I added a quart of Polyquat algaecide (you don't have to) and I will shock my pool up to 15ppm just before I close it--so the filter will be sanitized. I'll drain it and cover it with a contractor's garbage bag and tape it tight around the neck and base. This makes it nearly air-tight but no tape actually gets on the filter, just the bag.
That's it!
Carl
Bookmarks