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#1 (permalink) |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: NW Ohio
Posts: 919
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Ok, anybody out there ever put in an above ground swimming pool themselves? Wife just brought home a 24' round pool kit in the van and said that she did me a favor and got another excuse for me to use my tractor. I have a gentle slope of hard clay in my back yard. Any tips are appreciated....
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#2 (permalink) |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Queensland, Australia
Posts: 1,391
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Not to much tractor time for you there I don't reckon.
All you need is a level area for the pool and a sand bedding or similar under it. Should be a piece of cake! As for putting up the pool - Wow now that is some fun ! Cheers PS - For more seat time you could fill the pool with the FEL bucket [img]/w3tcompact/icons/laugh.gif[/img] |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Bronze Member
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Lansing, MI
Posts: 60
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My father in law has the same type pool in what sounds like the same situation. The guys that installed it dug it out so that it is about 5' or so in the center and about 3' or so near the sidewall. They dug it so that the top edge of the pool (and therefore the water in the pool) is level. This did leave a gap between the pool sidewall and the ground where it the soil was removed. The gap varies from about 1' to 1.5' from the side of the pool and at the deepest it is maybe 2'. There has not been any caveing in of the soil into the side of the pool as yet and it's about 3-4 years old.
I don't really know what other options would be viable in these situations (of course I havn't thought about it too much either); but the pool works great! If the weather holds I might take a barley pop over on Sunday to check the water temp. Good luck w/ your project! b249 |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Super Star Member
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: South Bend, Indiana (near)
Posts: 12,701
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Yeah, I have a great story, er... experience with 24' round pools.
We got our "free" pool from someone who didn't want it anymore. We took it down and hauled it to our house. The liner was unusable, so we had to buy a new liner, $150.00. I dug out the area by hand(no tractor then). One bit of advice; never use fill. Always dig down to solid soil. If the pool is going to be installed on a sloping are, dont be tempted to take the dirt from the high side and move it to the low side. It does not work. Also, be sure to get ALL tree roots and plants out or they will either work up through the liner or decay, rot away and leave a dip in the bottom. After we got it filled, all was fine for the first year. Then the moles moved in. They tunnelled under the pool, making inverted mole paths everywhere. They finally poked up through the pool liner right at the edge and blew out theliner, which promptly drained the pool in about 15 minutes. 12,500 gallons of water causes some amazing damage. So make sure you have a path for the water to go away from your basement or garage just in case the liner ever bursts due to moles(side note: I killed 29 moles two years ago and over 50 last year, all within 100' of the pool. This year I've killed 6 since last weekend, Memorial Day, which is my official "Opening Day" for the mole hunting season) So, we got another liner, $150.00 and put it in, only to find out that when the first one blew out, it made the pool egg shaped. So the liner wouldn't fit. I took it out and folder it up neatly and put it in the back of the garage, as it was getting cold and we decided to wait until spring to put it up again. In the spring, I was weed eating near the back of the garage. What I didn't know was that there was a gap at the bottom of the garage and the string trimmer ripped a long gash into the liner that was unrepairable. Another $150.00 liner. Then the filter's valve cracked and "They don't make those anymore", so we had to buy a new filter. $350.00. Then my kid developed an allergic reaction to chlorine. So we had to drain the pool, refill it and switch to Baquacil, a non-chlorine sanitizer. It has been fine for the last two years and we enjoy our $800.00 "free" pool quite a bit, although it was so cold last summer that we only used it about 10 times. |
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#5 (permalink) |
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Join Date: May 2002
Location: Pleasant Hill, Iowa
Posts: 74
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a suggestion for you for the moles. .....You wouldnt have any IF you take away the food source for them. moles eat grubs. You got grubs in your soil. Get rid of them and the moles will not show up anymore. i had them all over. Couldnt ever catch them tho. Spead some Grub'X on ground with a rotory spreader. Kept at it. No more moles tearing thru my yard. Took 4 applications 1st year, now i do one mid summer. Moles come a little way into my yard from neighbors untreated, unkept, unmowed yard, maybe a foot trail, goes no further. I think they turn around and go back the way they came. just an idea to try and help ya.
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#6 (permalink) |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Westminster, Maryland
Posts: 659
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A suggestion - When we put ours in, I covered the sand with the 1/2 " polystyrene(sp?) insulation they sell at Lowes. It gave me a very flat surface. Used duct tape (what else is there) to tape the 4 X 8 sheets together. We opened ours for the 6 th summer and the kids are always in it. Great exercise.
I had to dig 14' on the high side to get a level area. Not too bad with the box blade and loader. |
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#7 (permalink) |
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Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Campton, NH
Posts: 268
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I have been toying with the idea of buying an above ground pool. Has anyone ever installed one of those big blue pools that apear to have a flotation ring around the top. When you fill it the ring rises and forms the pool.
Also What are the real expenses that go along with a pool? I have this fear of spending X$ for the pool then finding out it is going to cost me twice as much to use it. David |
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#8 (permalink) |
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Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: So. N.H
Posts: 121
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DLABRIE
WE bought one of those pools last year about 4 feet deep boy it is easey too set up clean an area of rocks spread out a tarp that comes with it install filter and hoses and just fill. I'm on a well so it took a littel time too fill than i added shock treatmnet and chlorine through out the year just make sure they clean sand from feet before entering and i didn't have to vaccuum kids loved it I used also EDT P.S. at end of year drain and put in barn getting ready too set it up again |
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#9 (permalink) |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Queensland, Australia
Posts: 1,391
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David
Re: pool running costs. We moved into our place here in December 2000. Our first ever pool. It is an in-ground saltwater. So far it has cost next to nothing to run. Much, much cheaper than I had been lead to believe. I understand chlorine pools are cheaper to buy but dearer to run. But boy, salt water is TOO EASY. In the last 11 months I have spent about $60 on chemicals and salt and that is it. Out power bill is fine as the pool is on off-peak power. Would be well under $1 per day. Only drama here is we can' use it through winter (Who can??) Cheers |
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#10 (permalink) |
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Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Rindge, NH
Posts: 280
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Neil,
I don't think salt water pools are very common over here. At least I've never heard of anybody with one. My Oz friends swear by them. I swam in one at a friends house in Brisbane and after the initial shock its just fine. -david |
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