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Thread: How Low Should You Go?

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    St. Louis, MO, USA.
    Posts
    3

    Default Re: How Low Should You Go?

    The liner in place when we moved into the house in Oct-04 (which we replaced the following spring) was floating at the deep end that winter.
    Yesterday I noticed that on the shallow end (where the wrinkles are occurring), the liner is not in contact with the side of the pool where the side transitions to the floor. We have had maybe an inch or two of rain in the last two days and have drainage issues around the pool.

  2. #2
    waste is offline PF Support Team Whizbang Spinner waste 3 stars waste 3 stars waste 3 stars
    Join Date
    Dec 1969
    Location
    S.E Maine
    Age
    59
    Posts
    1,765

    Default Re: How Low Should You Go?

    With a fairly new liner the wrinkles being confined to the shallow end floor points to something my boss calls 'surface water' (this is different from ground water in that it's the result of the winter snow meltoff and spring rains not being able to pass through the dirt surrounding the pool quickly enough so some 'puddles' at > the floor level while waiting to be absorbed which pushes the liner up-- ground water is what caused the deep end floating a few years ago, the water table in the pool area came up higher than the floor), if the yard or neighbor's yard slopes towards your pool, it's gonna keep happening until you can improve the drainage around the pool . I also assume that you have been keeping the pH > 7.0.

    Back to the origional ?, which I overlooked in my first response , with a high water table, or drainage issues - keep as much water in the pool as you can when you close! You can use a blower (many types) to evacuate the water from the lines and plug them while the air is still being forced through them without having to fear ice damage (whoever does the plugging will get wet ). If you want to be able to keep the water at ~ opperational level, they make 'blow through' skimmer freeze protection Gizzmos. The morre water in the pool, the better the liner will be able to resist the ground or surface water!
    Luv & Luk, Ted

    Having done construction and service for 4 pool companies in 4 states starting in 1988, what I know about pools could fill a couple of books - what I don't know could fill libraries

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