Dennis said:
Hi waste, I am not doing any math here so making a mistake would be a little difficult.

My fiqure came from an installation manual I read over twenty years ago.
I was however going ask Carl that same question. Did you allow for two inches of sand, a six inch cove and the water level a few inches down from the top of the pool. Would that get it closer to 7500 ?
Dennis, I ALWAYS consider the WATER level, not the wall height. I never thought about the cove (the angle would be fun to figure in--must be a twist on the volume of a cone--but I'm WAGging it that it would mean no more than 1%, if even that.). By using the water level, you don't need to figure the 2" of sand--it's already there. Normally, if the WALL is 4', I assume a water level of 3.5'. But I also assume if someone tells me the water depth is 4', it's 4'. Just like I assume if they tell me the diameter is 18', it's 18', not 17' 6".
Still, if you are within 100 gallons on a 7600 gallon pool, it's not going to screw up you chemical calculations. In fact, it's my contention that if you are off by 5% either way it's TOTALLY irrelevant, and if you are off by 10% either way, it's probably not going to matter much.
Thoughts on calculating the cove (see what you started! :lol: ):
Assume it's 45 degrees, 6" high, and 6" wide.
Let's start by computing a washer shape around the pool that's 6"x6" on the bottom edge, where the cove goes. Yeah, it's got a square profile. I know. Just wait.
Now compute a pool that 18' by 6" and another that's 17' by 6". Using D^2*H*5.9 we get 956gal(18') - 853 gal(17') = 103 gallons for the 6"HxW ring around the pool for the cove. Why 17'? because our washer shape is 6" wide--and it's on both sides of the pool, so you double it to 1'. Thus 17'.
Now, since the cove is a diagonal, it has half of that volume, or 51.5 gallons. I certainly wouldn't worry about that in calculating a 7600 gal pool