Above Ground Pools

AgronAlum

Well-Known Member
Jul 12, 2014
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You should have joined a country club. I warned you…. jk.. have fun.

I got a little sentimental tearing down the old one because it’s one of the only things the kids all do together (ages 3, 5 and 12). It’s nice being able to send them out for an hour or whatever and they’re done. Especially now that Ankeny doesn’t have a family pool pass.

I think it’s 1000 bucks or whatever well spent.
 

JM4CY

Well-Known Member
SuperFanatic
SuperFanatic T2
Aug 23, 2012
37,791
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America
Got er done. <1 inch from side to side. Happy with that. Need to add some retaining something or other to the bottom side to keep the sand from washing out.

If anyone in ankeny needs some sand, I’ve got about 2000 lbs sitting in the driveway. Come and get it.


View attachment 129997

View attachment 129998
Find a place to keep the sand. You’ll need to replace/refill some spots next year.
 

Frak

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Apr 27, 2009
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So I got the hole patched up but a couple more started up and I think the liner is just done.

Anyone have experience with the Intex XTR series pools? We have the regular Intex Prism pool right now.

The current one is sitting on a concrete pad but we’re looking at going bigger and cutting out a spot in the yard, thus freeing up the pad for other stuff. The plan is to dig out the sod, level it, lay some sand and the put the pool directly on the sand base.
We put sand down under ours and it settled some. Kind of wish I would have just leveled the dirt and bought some sheet insulation.
 

ripvdub

Well-Known Member
Mar 20, 2006
8,352
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Iowa
We took ours down every September, so I would re level the ground every fall. The weight of the water helps pack everything down.
 

swiacy

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Apr 9, 2009
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Don’t let anybody else mow the grass within 20’ or so. That way when an object penetrates the sidewall it will be your fault.
 

AgronAlum

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Jul 12, 2014
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Talk to me about winterizing. Ive read three different options. I’ve taken it down and stored in the past but this one is quite a bit bigger.

Drain, take it down and store it. (Not preferred for space reasons)

Leave it mostly full, remove the filter and winterize.

Leave a little water, remove the filter and winterize.


I haven’t done anything all year but run the filter and keep it clean with shock. If I winterize the water, do I need to make sure it’s completely balanced when it comes to ph, stabilizer and chlorine before the winterizing pill?
 

NWICY

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Sep 2, 2012
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Talk to me about winterizing. Ive read three different options. I’ve taken it down and stored in the past but this one is quite a bit bigger.

Drain, take it down and store it. (Not preferred for space reasons)

Leave it mostly full, remove the filter and winterize.

Leave a little water, remove the filter and winterize.


I haven’t done anything all year but run the filter and keep it clean with shock. If I winterize the water, do I need to make sure it’s completely balanced when it comes to ph, stabilizer and chlorine before the winterizing pill?

Full disclosure I know 0 about pools, BUT there is a pool owners thread on Surly Horns that is quite informative. You might find your answer skimming that or post your question there.
 
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kmcbrid

Active Member
Mar 23, 2006
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Ankeny, IA
www.municipalgame.com
Talk to me about winterizing. Ive read three different options. I’ve taken it down and stored in the past but this one is quite a bit bigger.

Drain, take it down and store it. (Not preferred for space reasons)

Leave it mostly full, remove the filter and winterize.

Leave a little water, remove the filter and winterize.


I haven’t done anything all year but run the filter and keep it clean with shock. If I winterize the water, do I need to make sure it’s completely balanced when it comes to ph, stabilizer and chlorine before the winterizing pill?

For our large (15' x 30') above ground pool, to winterize, we drain the pool to ~6" below the skimmer. Then we store the pump and all hoses that aren't permanently attached in the garage. We drain the sand filter and cover with tarp. For the water left, we make sure it is in decent chemical shape pool wise then put in a winterize bobber filled with shock/chlorine that will slowly distrubute thoughout the winter. Once that is done, we cover with a tarp and then let it be.

Overall this has worked well. In the spring, take the cover off, hook everything back up, refill, and do a little cleaning. Takes almost no time to get the water back to normal.
 
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AgronAlum

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Jul 12, 2014
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Anyone have a skimmer that actually works? I got the pool up early this year and it was just in time to for the cottonwood trees.

I tried a Walmart brand skimmer which looked pretty close to the Intex brand and it did absolutely nothing. I tried throttling and completely blocking off the second intake and it still did nothing. It would pull the crap in and spit it back out.

For reference this is the pool we have and it has their entry level sand pump.

 

MTCyclone43

Well-Known Member
Feb 22, 2016
924
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Northwest Montana
So I got the hole patched up but a couple more started up and I think the liner is just done.

Anyone have experience with the Intex XTR series pools? We have the regular Intex Prism pool right now.

The current one is sitting on a concrete pad but we’re looking at going bigger and cutting out a spot in the yard, thus freeing up the pad for other stuff. The plan is to dig out the sod, level it, lay some sand and the put the pool directly on the sand base.
I had the old round inflatable top ring Intex from the early 2000s and hooked it up to a double black solar panels and I was able to swim 10 months out of the year- we kept the heat in at night with a solar blanket.
 

Frak

Well-Known Member
Apr 27, 2009
11,375
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Anyone have a skimmer that actually works? I got the pool up early this year and it was just in time to for the cottonwood trees.

I tried a Walmart brand skimmer which looked pretty close to the Intex brand and it did absolutely nothing. I tried throttling and completely blocking off the second intake and it still did nothing. It would pull the crap in and spit it back out.

For reference this is the pool we have and it has their entry level sand pump.


Our experience was that it's not the skimmer that is the problem, it's the pump. The entry level pump isn't strong enough to pull stuff in. Once we bought a stronger pump/sand filter combo, that cleared things up right away.
 

AgronAlum

Well-Known Member
Jul 12, 2014
6,653
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Our experience was that it's not the skimmer that is the problem, it's the pump. The entry level pump isn't strong enough to pull stuff in. Once we bought a stronger pump/sand filter combo, that cleared things up right away.

I was wondering about that. I did see some recommendations elsewhere for a through the wall skimmer. I'm not sure if it will help the problem having the same pump though.


 

Gunnerclone

Well-Known Member
Jul 16, 2010
75,077
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DSM
Just got to say the main thing I’ve come away with here is a massive appreciation for the huge level of dedication to above ground pools in the CF community.

I had no idea people take these down and then put them up every year. I thought they just stay.

I had no idea that people cut out their yards and put down a base. I thought you just threw them out there and let the grass die underneath.
 

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