frustratedpoolmom said:
I've never experienced this but have often wondered....
And maybe this is a really dumb or obvious question.... :blah:
when the saturated ground begins to dry up, and the water table lowers, won't the bubbles go away on their own, simply from the pressure of the water IN the pool?
Forgive my silly question, not fully awake yet....
Ann
there is NO such thing as a silly, dumb nor stupid question! No one is born knowing this stuff and the best way to find the answer is to ask for it :-D
Here's what's going on - the water beneath the liner has enough static pressure to force the liner up and bubble, the extra liner material had to come from somewhere (either it got pulled in from the walls or the liner itself had enough stretch in it to accommodate the hydrostatic water pressure from below) when the ground water recedes, you've got a little extra liner in that spot which is being pushed down by the water in the pool. Any place that didn't bubble has enough pool water pressure to keep it from moving, therefore you end up with one area (where the liner bubbled) that has extra material and no place to go and ends up wrinkling in much the same way your fingers or toes do when immersed too long (this is actually a very good analogy for reasons I won't get into). It's possible to work the wrinkles formed with a pool brush or sqeegee to get the extra liner to the walls where there should be room to accommodate it. At some point the water in the pool will have ~ equal pressure as the water under the liner - that's when you can move the bubble and not have it re-form. (it's like setting a liner in the first place, you want enough pressure on the pool side of the liner to keep the liner from forming wrinkles)
Lanice, I'm ~100% sure that it's water, not air, you are dealing with - give a bubble a tap with the bristles of the brush - air would resist the force, water will accommodate that tap and wiggle. (food for thought - how the heck would air get under there and have enough pressure to bubble the liner? :? ) How much water is in the shallow end right now and how much was there when you stopped draining the pool? If you can raise the water to reach ~ equilibrium (the pressure from under the liner ~= the pressure from below), the bubble should be easier to push to the walls. I will have to say that it's easier to move the bubble/ wrinkles from within the pool either by slowly forcing it, with your fingers or feet to the wall or by using the toilet plunger like I mentioned before. If you continue to fill the pool the bubble will eventually collapse, leaving wrinkles - if you stop the water at that point, you should be able to manually or by plunger work out the wrinkles. As I said before, there are other options, but those would require redraining the pool and getting the water out from under the liner (this would take a LOT more work and may require tools you don't have ready access to

)
As long as I'm speculating on why this happened, how did you originally drain the pool and where did you discharge the water?
I'm sorry the original post I gave didn't help, and for the questions - but, I do this stuff every spring (NOT looking forward to doing it another ~20 times in the next couple months

) and know what needs be done and how to make it easier for you - I'm going with the easiest, for you, first
