He's baa-aack!
Please welcome my friend
@mcleod to the forum, and take good care of him. Intro pleasantries aside, he's got an emergency brewing as I write.
He's inherited a 20K vinyl in-ground with tab feeder. We've corrected his CYA with a no-drain water exchange (was 80, now 40), and I had him remove all the tabs. He was tackling the green with a SLAM. Apparently it's been warm enough in Texas to turn the pool. But now he's got freezing weather and his pump and skimmers stopped circulating.
He returned late last night only to find his pump volute empty. He troubleshot the pipes to the skimmers just now (there are two) and they appear to be blocked (they were working fine yesterday). I suspect he might not have seated his pump lid o-ring correctly. His two-wheel mechanical timer box has a freeze-protection gizmo. I'm guessing the freeze protection kicked on but the pump lost prime and then sucked itself dry. And I'm guessing now that some portion of his suction-side plumbing is blocked with ice? He's probably got a 10" frost line.
This is what he's working on now before it gets too dark and cold tonight.
He's rigging a sump pump with a splitter on the output to two hoses. I suggested he keep those hoses underwater and feed them into the two skimmer mouths. I'm thinking the hoses under water will keep them from freezing. And driving pool water into each skimmer will maybe keep them from freezing, too. Water exiting the skimmer mouths onto the surface will keep the surface moving enough to inhibit any ice forming there.
Meanwhile I suggested seeing if he could warm up the suction-side manifold enough to unfreeze the blockage, which I'm hoping is just the first few inches underground, by the pump. Space heater? Electric blanket? Pouring warm (NOT HOT) water directly into the volute?
I am definitely out of my element here, as I've never had to deal with any of this in CA. Has anybody ever tried anything like that? Any suggestions? I tried to impart the importance to mcleod of getting that pump running tonight.