Howdy!
Here I am, closing my pool later than I should again. We had a rough season trying to find the leak, and then getting someone to fix it. I’ll post about that separately. Consequently I didn’t get my plumbing completely fixed-my main drain is plumbed directly to my pump and we ran all summer sans skimmers (which is awful btw unless you LOVE manually skimming your pool several times a day.)
Now, I’ve got the pool mostly closed, so that I could minimize risk while I work out how to deal with this main drain issue. I cleaned the pool as best I could (robot vacuum died mid-august, can’t use skimmers, and my $100 battery operated vacuum was left out in the rain in pieces by my child so I now have NO vacuum…) and balanced the water. Drained below returns, emptied skimmers with a hand pump, drained and removed plugs, gauge etc from filter, drained and removed basket from filter. I also disconnected the union right before the returns and blew some air in there with a small tire compressor. It kinda worked. It took a while, and I never got a big “blow” of air but eventually water was just trickling so I figured it’s good enough for now.
This weekend, I finally have my compressor back from my dad and I’m going to attempt to clear the returns completely and fill with antifreeze and create the airlock on the main drain BUT, I want to confirm my plan is reasonable. I’d love if someone can confirm it’ll actually work but I’m thinking what I’m going to do is not a common or recommended practice so maybe no one knows.
Last year I hacked my busted valve off and used my shop vac to push as much air in as I could and then jammed a rubber plug in the pipe. I know that water rushed back in in the time it took me to get the plug in place and I took a chance with my pipes by doing that. Well, this year I don’t have a shop vac (my mom stole it-long story) and my pipe is not open for me to do it that way. So, my plan is to create the airlock in the pump itself.
I have a ball valve that will fit into the drain plug port that will accept my air compressor so what I plan to do is use a rubber plug to block off the opening to the impeller, then I’ll Teflon tape and reinstall the second drain plug, give a fresh coat of lube to the lid, tighten it down, and then blow air into the basket drain fitted with the ball valve till I see bubbles, then close the ball valve and disconnect the compressor.
My concern is if the pump lid will hold the airlock all winter? Or, at all? I have an extra lid…should I use that one in case there will be strain on it?
Is there anything else wrong with my plan? Any other suggestions? I’m on a tight budget and don’t have anyone to help me so I’m on my own out there, with limited resources.
Here’s a picture of the pump set up right now:

Here I am, closing my pool later than I should again. We had a rough season trying to find the leak, and then getting someone to fix it. I’ll post about that separately. Consequently I didn’t get my plumbing completely fixed-my main drain is plumbed directly to my pump and we ran all summer sans skimmers (which is awful btw unless you LOVE manually skimming your pool several times a day.)
Now, I’ve got the pool mostly closed, so that I could minimize risk while I work out how to deal with this main drain issue. I cleaned the pool as best I could (robot vacuum died mid-august, can’t use skimmers, and my $100 battery operated vacuum was left out in the rain in pieces by my child so I now have NO vacuum…) and balanced the water. Drained below returns, emptied skimmers with a hand pump, drained and removed plugs, gauge etc from filter, drained and removed basket from filter. I also disconnected the union right before the returns and blew some air in there with a small tire compressor. It kinda worked. It took a while, and I never got a big “blow” of air but eventually water was just trickling so I figured it’s good enough for now.
This weekend, I finally have my compressor back from my dad and I’m going to attempt to clear the returns completely and fill with antifreeze and create the airlock on the main drain BUT, I want to confirm my plan is reasonable. I’d love if someone can confirm it’ll actually work but I’m thinking what I’m going to do is not a common or recommended practice so maybe no one knows.
Last year I hacked my busted valve off and used my shop vac to push as much air in as I could and then jammed a rubber plug in the pipe. I know that water rushed back in in the time it took me to get the plug in place and I took a chance with my pipes by doing that. Well, this year I don’t have a shop vac (my mom stole it-long story) and my pipe is not open for me to do it that way. So, my plan is to create the airlock in the pump itself.
I have a ball valve that will fit into the drain plug port that will accept my air compressor so what I plan to do is use a rubber plug to block off the opening to the impeller, then I’ll Teflon tape and reinstall the second drain plug, give a fresh coat of lube to the lid, tighten it down, and then blow air into the basket drain fitted with the ball valve till I see bubbles, then close the ball valve and disconnect the compressor.
My concern is if the pump lid will hold the airlock all winter? Or, at all? I have an extra lid…should I use that one in case there will be strain on it?
Is there anything else wrong with my plan? Any other suggestions? I’m on a tight budget and don’t have anyone to help me so I’m on my own out there, with limited resources.
Here’s a picture of the pump set up right now:

