Hello,
When I did my pool, I used sand for the base and cove, however, this past summer there were several members who built their pools using the 2" pink foam (available at your local building supply store, it's used to insulate the exterior wall of a house with siding), you can use the cove you allready have with this simply by installing it on top of the foam.
The foam has to be cut to fit perfectly and taping the seams is a really good idea.
I don't know if you need to put the happy bottom on top of the foam or if that's just plain overkill.
Good call on using screenings, that's what I did, but be careful of how much fill you put inside the pool from the floor level up, you do not want to have your liner get all wrinkled because the hole isn't deep enough - a good way to know if you're on track is to measure the top of the liner j hook (where it curves) to the seam center where it meets the floor piece, this measurement should be equal to the measurement from top of wall to center of cove - at least that's what it was for my pool - this allowed the liner to stretch into teh remaining 1-2" of depth and allowed it to pull all wrinkles out of itself as it filled.
For my pool, I kept it about 8" deeper towards the center, my floor was even with the bottom track and my cove was built up on the floor, the liner stretched in nicely, and my pool has a saucer style bottom (somewhat deeper in the center) however, it's also 30 feet round so i had a lot more material to allow for the stretching than you will have.
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