Wednesday, July 13, 2011

The Pit, I Mean the Pool



Back in May, I cracked open the winter cover on the pool to find a not so wanted discovery. The pool had drained, the liner had split, and the green slime had taken over. ugggghhhh
I may have stated in the past, that this house always "speaks" to us. We never get to choose what house projects we want to do next, our house always tells us what will be next. Apparently this summer, it would be the pool!

I called the "pool" people, and they said a liner usually lasts 12 years. Well, this is the 12th summer for our liner, and apparently a time bomb goes off that year and everything splits out. It seemed completely fine when we closed it last summer :)

So the phone calls began on new liners, installers, and such. And because Ryan and I like to punish ourselves, we finally concluded that we would buy a liner online from a pool wholesaler and install it ourselves. Call us crazy, because we ARE!!!!!!!!


There is the culprit split in the right corner.

Here is the pool after we pumped out the slime water that was still in the deep end. The liner instantly started getting brittle and pulling out of the sides over those next few weeks.
The most important job in ordering/installing a new liner is the MEASURING. So the boys and I took on the feat of collecting the many scores of measurements that were needed to get our new liner ordered. We had to be pretty creative in doing so. It doesn't look steep, but it is---Nathan is being held up by that hose while he gets that wall measurement :)

The boys peeled out all of the old caulk, and I repainted all of the aluminum coping. Here I am priming it, and I decided to take a risk and paint it brown for a change.

Sealing off all of the rusty corrosion areas on the steel walls with a rust sealer paint. Then Ryan attacked the parts that had corroded through with Bondo filler.
Looks like graffiti, but all the prep is close to done at this point--1 month in to the job.
We had to leave the old liner in until the very day of installation, so we could keep the sand base in tact. The new liner came in one compact cardboard box, but the old liner filled three dumpsters after we cut it out in chunks. We couldn't drag it out, so that we wouldn't ruin the sculpted bottom. Never mind the big pregnant lady there in the middle :)


Liner almost out, and very hot down in the sand pit.
Inspecting the sand, and waiting for our "help" to arrive for liner installation.
We opted to cover the steel walls with a foam liner, helps keep corrosion from ruining the liner, and supposed to help with insulating too.


The liner weighs 220 pounds. All hands on deck were busy pulling it across the deck and holding the corners into place----so no pictures of that part. But once we got the corners connected, connected the sides, and it looked like this. We began smoothing out the wrinkles and attaching a shop vac to start sucking out the air behind it.
Then the water filling begins----hours and hours of water filling. We will let you know next month how much 25,000 gallons of water adds to your water bill!



The kids couldn't wait to get swimming, so they jumped in when the first two feet filled up. You can see that there are two shop vacs sucking air the entire time that we filled it up. The wrinkles were nicely disappearing, and we adjusted them as it went.
Day two of filling, about half way now. Taking another swim to test out the water.
And finally, the pool was put to use for a 4th of July party, the water just filling in in time!
Moral of the story, if your time is free to you---it can be a HUGE money savings to install your own pool liner. We saved $3000 doing it ourselves, and it really was totally do-able. And we still have quite a few swimming weeks to go this summer!

1 comment:

David and Kira said...

You guys did awesome on it! I only wish we could have swam longer!!

Something About Me

IT'S THE LITTLE MOMENTS HERE AND THERE THAT MAKE LIFE WORTH IT! I LIVE FOR THE LITTLE MOMENTS THAT CAN'T BE PREDICTED OR PRODUCED, JUST EXPERIENCED!