Hi, I am new to the forum. Our pool is brand new (opened Mid March 2022). I have been learning about pool chemistry. First water test our Phosphates were beyond the pool store test at 4,000 ++. It has taken me a month to get the phosphates into a reasonable teritory around 200. Never did find out why the phosphates were so high.
As a result of some recent storms, I decided to buy a winter pool cover. I went with a winter cover because with a 20-year warranty they should last longer than a summer cover and the summer covers are fragile at a similar price. I put the cover on and Sunday we had a good storm. The white objects are Sand Bags I bought to hold the pool cover in place, instead of using the water tubes. You can see in the pictures several inches of water from the Sunday storm that passed through the Dallas/Fort Worth area Sunday, April 24th, 2022. I put my submersible sump pump on the cover to send the water down the side yard drain to the front of the house.
I plan on using the cover when we are not swimming. I also bought a pool cover reel set that makes it very easy to wrap up the pool cover when we want to swim and then we can just drag it back across the pool when we finish.
I have an SWG pool and I had to turn off the SWG. I had the SWG working just fine and then covered the pool. After a couple of days, the chlorine jumped from around 3.5 to 11. So the cover made a huge difference in keeping the chlorine in the pool, stopping evaporation, and keeping the dirt and rainwater out of the pool. Very pleased with the result.
Does anyone know if the summer Texas weather would be too hot for a pool cover like this?
Mark
As a result of some recent storms, I decided to buy a winter pool cover. I went with a winter cover because with a 20-year warranty they should last longer than a summer cover and the summer covers are fragile at a similar price. I put the cover on and Sunday we had a good storm. The white objects are Sand Bags I bought to hold the pool cover in place, instead of using the water tubes. You can see in the pictures several inches of water from the Sunday storm that passed through the Dallas/Fort Worth area Sunday, April 24th, 2022. I put my submersible sump pump on the cover to send the water down the side yard drain to the front of the house.
I plan on using the cover when we are not swimming. I also bought a pool cover reel set that makes it very easy to wrap up the pool cover when we want to swim and then we can just drag it back across the pool when we finish.
I have an SWG pool and I had to turn off the SWG. I had the SWG working just fine and then covered the pool. After a couple of days, the chlorine jumped from around 3.5 to 11. So the cover made a huge difference in keeping the chlorine in the pool, stopping evaporation, and keeping the dirt and rainwater out of the pool. Very pleased with the result.
Does anyone know if the summer Texas weather would be too hot for a pool cover like this?
Mark