Moving.. Going to do a DIY Build.

Where did you get yours?
My intelliflo shipped from inyopools a couple days after ordering. My SWG and controller (also inyo) got backordered a couple hours after ordering with a few month ETA. The SWG came a few weeks later, early, and the controller order got canceled by them altogether.

It was last year but the luck of the draw continues this year as well. If you catch the right site/store on the right day, you win. It takes a good deal of effort to have a wide enough net. I had calls, emails and in person visits going. I checked the known retailers websites every hour.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ShallowWater
Hardly seems worth it. On my previous pool I tested every other day in the summer and once a week in the winter religiously and if I was going to be on vacation in the summer I would dose the pool with extra chlorine before I left
Yeah in a residential pool it seems another layer of complexity that isn’t really necessary. Especially given regular maintenance and then troubleshooting when things go wrong. That said, I do like the convenience of the Intelliph and SWG integration in my pool once they’re dialed for the season.
 
Yeah in a residential pool it seems another layer of complexity that isn’t really necessary. Especially given regular maintenance and then troubleshooting when things go wrong. That said, I do like the convenience of the Intelliph and SWG integration in my pool once they’re dialed for the season.
Does IntellipH add acid or just notify when pH is high?
 
Does IntellipH add acid or just notify when pH is high?
It’s a “dumb” system dosing acid up to 4 ounces per hour based on how much runtime you select on a percentage of 0 - 100. It’s convenient but it does have its own known issues that users have discovered and or worked around.
 
My intelliflo shipped from inyopools a couple days after ordering. My SWG and controller (also inyo) got backordered a couple hours after ordering with a few month ETA. The SWG came a few weeks later, early, and the controller order got canceled by them altogether.

It was last year but the luck of the draw continues this year as well. If you catch the right site/store on the right day, you win. It takes a good deal of effort to have a wide enough net. I had calls, emails and in person visits going. I checked the known retailers websites every hour.
Guess I will cast a bigger net but the jobber store, Pool Electrical Products has a good price for the IntelliFlow VSF 011056.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Newdude
It’s a “dumb” system dosing acid up to 4 ounces per hour based on how much runtime you select on a percentage of 0 - 100. It’s convenient but it does have its own known issues that users have discovered and or worked around.
Not all that IntelliGent..
 

Enjoying this content?

Support TFP with a donation.

Give Support
I think you can get a lot of tasks from here....


So is this order valid for using concrete coping which is contiguous with the concrete deck?

I thought the pool needed to be filled right after the plaster to help it cure without cracking?
  1. Get a pool design and engineering
  2. Get bids and select contractors
  3. Complete layout, dig, and steel
  4. Plumbing rough in
  5. electrical rough in
  6. gunnite
  7. Water edge tile
  8. finish electrical
  9. finish plumbing
  10. Plaster/pebbletec finish
  11. Decking and coping
  12. Pool fill and initial startup
 
Coping should go on after tile and before plaster.

Water should go into pool six hours after plaster completed.

Exact details of tile, coping, and deck depend on the design and materisls.

There are three primary different designs for coping…


Deck materials vary widely. Sometimes decks wait until after plaster so the workmen don’t mess up a new deck. Other times decks are put in before plaster.

Get your inspections and pipe pressure tests on the chart.

You need gas line run? Your gas meter of sufficient capacity?

There is plumbing to be roughed in after dig and before steel.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ShallowWater
Chiming in to say excavation starts tomorrow. We waited for our turf removal rebate to get approved because we're removing 5,000 sf of grass here in SoCal before excavating the pool. The spoils from the excavation will be used to do some contour grading in the front yard. The actual pool excavation probably won't be until Thursday but we shall see. I'll report back with some pics as things start to move along.

Also, The 011056 IntelliFlow pumps have been located and procured by my plumber sub contractor at a price far below what even the best on-line retail price is showing right now, saving almost $1,000 on the two pumps, so that completes the procurement of the major equipment list. Piping etc is included in the plumber's bid. By networking with different subs I've whittled down my budget into a pretty comfortable range..
 
  • Love
Reactions: kimkats and Newdude
VERY smart move! $$$$$$ more bling for the pool and area!!!

AND more bling!!!
There's a $2+/sf rebate for replacing turf with drought tolerant landscaping so the rebate will go there but this house was in dire need of new landscaping as it hadn't been redone since new in 1960. The "bushes" that previously hid the house were at least 6" in diameter and as high as the eaves and in front of the large picture window was ivy and old ugly trees.

The savings on the pumps will go for pool bling for sure.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Newdude
Shotcrete estimates are all over the place. based on my pool plans, I come up with the following on the extreme upper end using more than the perimeter or base dimensions of my proposed pool:

Pool Plan.jpg

Floor:
40ft x 18ft x 0.5ft = 360 cu ft

Walls:
(40ft x 2sides + 18ft x 2sides) x 4ft Depth x 0.5ft = 232 cu ft.

Total is 592 cu ft / 27 cu ft per cu yd = 22 cu yds.

Add in 20% for waste, spa etc and I come up with 26 cu yds.

I've got one estimate for $3,200 min and $85 (seems low or I missed the 2 in $285 and heard $85)/cu yd over 36 cu yds, maybe around $6,000.

I've got another for 40 to 45 cu yds at $260/cu yd or between $10,400 and $11,700 plus set up and formwork if needed. When I called him on it he said you only pay for what you use. Who's measuring? I'll need weigmaster certs for that but based on my numbers I should be able to do it with a couple 12 cu yd trucks.

I have a third at $285/cu yd, so your looking at or just under $10,000.

Do these guys not read or go off plans when giving a bid?

I'm pretty good with math and arithmetic but these numbers seem way wrong (at least the first and third estimate). If the second is right the $3,200 minimum works out to $3,060 for 36 cu yds at $85/cu yd plus $140 set up.

Help me out and check my math. I'm using a rough estimate for a pool larger than I'm building then increasing it by 20%. Am I missing something?
 
Let the sun shine in!!! LOVE those windows!!! Well done!
Only problem is the sun does shine in or at least radiates through! Looking into automated shades to block out UV and heat in the afternoon on the west side which these windows face.

Cool thing is the sliders to the covered patio are just as big and the stepped water fall will be visible from inside the home!

770F2DD5-B9DD-40FE-82FD-CD2E3062C0EC.jpeg9E6B00E7-5B61-4C6C-A8FB-C354275471FF.jpeg
Photos taken during the remodel. I don't have any recent pictures.
 
Last edited:
I did a more accurate takeoff which I am not spelling out specifically here but came up with 22 yd.³ in which equates to $6270. I wonder if some owner builders good raked over the coals because I don’t know how to calculate the volume of Shotcrete to be used.
 

Enjoying this content?

Support TFP with a donation.

Give Support
Thread Status
Hello , This thread has been inactive for over 60 days. New postings here are unlikely to be seen or responded to by other members. For better visibility, consider Starting A New Thread.