Greetings. Wondering whether a UV-reflecting pool cover would decrease rate of UV-induced FC loss? Any experience appreciated. Regards,
I had the same feelingI don't believe I was ever as happy for something to reach end of life as when my solar cover died.
It worked amazing to its abilities, but was a buzz kill everytime we ran down there wanting to hop in.
We used to take it off every time we used the pool. Back then we needed to since we had kids and they would "swim" in the pool. Since our pool is round and no deck we never had a solar cover reel so it was completely off laying on chairs or on the ground. Today my kids are adults and when we do go in it's for floating around and drinking (mostly adultI don't believe I was ever as happy for something to reach end of life as when my solar cover died.
It worked amazing to its abilities, but was a buzz kill everytime we ran down there wanting to hop in.
As others have said, yes it does cut down on chlorine loss and yes it does contribute to the water retaining/heating up. We went into our pool with 92 degree water and it was not very refreshing at first but eventually we thought it became "cooler" vs the outside air.Greetings. Wondering whether a UV-reflecting pool cover would decrease rate of UV-induced FC loss? Any experience appreciated. Regards,
+1. Mine thought it was the best shortcut ever, upon covering the pool the first time. If he was trapped upside down, it would have gone differently because the insanely heavy dog/water burrito took several minutes to drag to the stairs and unburrito.One thing to consider is safety though. A few days in our dog fell in by accident and luckily we were there to pull him out, scared the Crud out of all of us.
A dog that likes the pool was the last straw, my cover is history. I found it cuts chlorine use by about 1/3. It actually made my pool more dirty. The skimmer doesn't skim with it on and junk just sinks to the bottom.+1. Mine thought it was the best shortcut ever, upon covering the pool the first time. If he was trapped upside down, it would have gone differently because the insanely heavy dog/water burrito took several minutes to drag to the stairs and unburrito.
The 'no animals or children allowed in the fenced pool area with the cover on' rule was born that 1st day.
Thank you. I needed to read this.Any cover will reduce UV loss. Almost all the plastic covers on the market are made of materials (polymers) that absorb UV light. In a clear and clean pool, a cover will reduce FC losses by at least half if not more.
However, in a hot Texas climate, your pool water will heat up significantly. I once left a pool cover on my pool until mid June many years ago. The water temp went into the high 90’s and my FC was almost totally gone (thermal loss). It took days for my water temperature to recover. It was unpleasant to swim in.
Also, a cover will not last long, 2 years at best. I never really bothered with a cover because their a pain to put on and off and they don’t last. Got tired of dropping $150 every other year very quickly