Yeah for seeing the main drain again! It will get there!
LOL on the long bench for the long dog......cute!
Kim
LOL on the long bench for the long dog......cute!
Kim

Sorry, I can't advise on exactly how to operate that valve actuator.... but no need to wait several hours between putting acid and chlorine in. Just allow 15-30 minutes between adding chlorine and acid. Leave the pump running from first add to 30 minutes after last add - at a minimum. And remember, you are presently maintaining the FC based on a non-SWG pool. Never let the FC get below the minimum on the Pool School - Chlorine / CYA Chart for your CYA level.
WOW - it looks AMAZING! Your travertine is so beautiful. What a difference with it installed! Hopefully they will replace for you. Love that you accommodated your corgi. I used to have a Pembroke. Hairiest little guy ever. [emoji4]
You have to have something, bubblers or returns, that lets the water come out of the filter into the pool. Making sure you understand:
Water leaves the pool by way of the skimmer or main drain (bottom of the pool) to the filter..........water leaves the filter to return to the pool either through the returns and/or bubblers. If you close both the returns and the bubblers there is no where for the water to go out of the filter=not good!
Kim![]()
The actuators have a little switch on them. Typically the side away from the valve end. Depends on how they set them up for your automation but you can move the switch to the opposite direction to drive your valve to move. Have to play with it to understand how it is set up.
Gotcha! So returns & bubblers can't both be off if the pump is running? Correct?
Did you have them remove some because they had deep holes, or even a small hole that went all the way through?Those pavers look great - I'd suggest that you take some time and look at every paver and check for things that shouldn't be there. The crew is going to be at your job for a few days and then they will move to the next job and never see your deck again. You will be looking at it every day so now is the time to speak up if something bothers you. I'd take a close look at the edges of the pavers that border you coping all around the pool. I had 5-6 pavers on mine that clearly got chipped during install, but if I hadn't flagged them they would still be there. I went around and put the same blue tape on every paver that I had an issue with. Keep in mind that travertine is a natural stone and some imperfections are normal, but if something doesn't seem right I would talk to the contractor about it. It's not too big of a deal to pull up the pavers at this point, so get it how you want it.
I had some issues with some of my coping pieces that had a lot of holes right on the bullnose edge, and a couple of pieces with a lot of deep holes. I didnt really reject any of my pavers that just had natural holes, but that gets pretty subjective. I had some challenges with my paver crew, but they eventually took care of everything I wasn't happy with so it turned out OK. I wluld just talk to your contractor about the pavers that are bothering you. If it comes down to it, you can always offer to pay for the extra material to replace the pavers that you don't like. Most likely it's only a handful of pavers and the cost of the material shouldn't be that much.