I just bought a house with a pool, I've probably watched about ten hours of videos so far. This one is by far the best one I've seen so far. Nice and simple I like it.
Great Video...thank you. For the conditioner, you did it wrong tho. you should add the conditioner to a bucket of water to disolve, then add directly to the skimmer. thanks for the great video
We just bought a house near New Orleans with a saltwater pool. Loved your video. It was very informative. I just have one question -- in other advice, I saw that salt should be added away from the drains, in the shallow end, and brushed around to dissolve before hitting the drain and back to the chlorine generator. You put the salt right near the drain and almost pushed it into the drain. Can you discuss the pros and cons of each approach? Thanks!
Great video. Lots of detail. I guess I am a lazy pool owner. My pool has a full fence around it, not connected to house. We have grand kids over a lot and want to make sure they can't just walk out the door and get to the pool. We also use a tarp to cover the pool in the winter. When the guys pull the tarp and open the pool, it looks like it did when I closed it in the fall. When they close it, they lower the water level below the skimmer, put the plugs in, and the anti-freeze. Being lazy, I use the test strips. They test everything in one strip, except salt level. My salt generator gives me the salt level. It takes me seconds to do all my tests. I also have a fiberglass pool and a pool robot that is similar to yours. No seams. If it wasn't for the water temp, we could be swimming within a day or two, once the chlorine level gets within range. In NC, we open our pool the first week in April. The sun is strong in NC. I use a solar cover and some solar heating panels I built to get the pool to warm up faster. It takes a couple of weeks to get it up to 80, if we have some good warm sunny days. When the water gets up to the mid 80's, I then put reflectix sheets around the filter and add fountains to the jets to help keep the water cooler. We have had it get up to the mid-90s before adding the reflectix and the fountains. Not refreshing. To verify my testing is correct, once a month I bring a water sample to a local pool shop and they test the water for free. They have all the particulars of my pool and equipment. They run the tests and tell me exactly how much of which chemical to add and the order to add them. Yah, they want to sell chemicals but I have never had a cloudy or green pool. For me, it worth the extra $20 I might spend in chemicals per year to not have my significant other upset because our pool is green.
If you add chlorine and your water turns brown you need to make a filter from a sump pump, hose, a bucket, poly fill pillow material. You have to filter the iron out.
Definitely the best video I've seen so far, nice pool by the way!...thank you 👏👏👏👍🤩
Thanks Arley, and thanks for watching!
As a first time pool owner this has been awesome to know what to expect in a couple months! I appreciate the time and detail put into the video
Thanks for watching!!
Great video…My first year opening a salt water pool in another few months. This will put me on the right path. Thanks! Ps…nice pool!
Thanks for watching, glad it helped and I appreciate the kind words!
I just bought a house with a pool, I've probably watched about ten hours of videos so far. This one is by far the best one I've seen so far. Nice and simple I like it.
Thank you so much! Hope you enjoy your new pool this year!
Thank you so much for this video. Very informative and very detailed. So helpful.
Glad it helped, thank you for watching!!
Great video, super helpful to those of us that are new pool owners. Thank you so much!
Glad it was helpful!
Great Video...thank you. For the conditioner, you did it wrong tho. you should add the conditioner to a bucket of water to disolve, then add directly to the skimmer. thanks for the great video
Such a great video thank you
Thanks for watching Christina!
We just bought a house near New Orleans with a saltwater pool. Loved your video. It was very informative. I just have one question -- in other advice, I saw that salt should be added away from the drains, in the shallow end, and brushed around to dissolve before hitting the drain and back to the chlorine generator. You put the salt right near the drain and almost pushed it into the drain. Can you discuss the pros and cons of each approach? Thanks!
Thanks for this video! I’m getting a pool installed in a few days!! Where do you store all these chemicals? Is storing it in the garage ok?
awesome video
Thank you!
Great video. Lots of detail. I guess I am a lazy pool owner. My pool has a full fence around it, not connected to house. We have grand kids over a lot and want to make sure they can't just walk out the door and get to the pool. We also use a tarp to cover the pool in the winter. When the guys pull the tarp and open the pool, it looks like it did when I closed it in the fall. When they close it, they lower the water level below the skimmer, put the plugs in, and the anti-freeze.
Being lazy, I use the test strips. They test everything in one strip, except salt level. My salt generator gives me the salt level. It takes me seconds to do all my tests.
I also have a fiberglass pool and a pool robot that is similar to yours. No seams. If it wasn't for the water temp, we could be swimming within a day or two, once the chlorine level gets within range.
In NC, we open our pool the first week in April. The sun is strong in NC. I use a solar cover and some solar heating panels I built to get the pool to warm up faster. It takes a couple of weeks to get it up to 80, if we have some good warm sunny days. When the water gets up to the mid 80's, I then put reflectix sheets around the filter and add fountains to the jets to help keep the water cooler. We have had it get up to the mid-90s before adding the reflectix and the fountains. Not refreshing.
To verify my testing is correct, once a month I bring a water sample to a local pool shop and they test the water for free. They have all the particulars of my pool and equipment. They run the tests and tell me exactly how much of which chemical to add and the order to add them. Yah, they want to sell chemicals but I have never had a cloudy or green pool. For me, it worth the extra $20 I might spend in chemicals per year to not have my significant other upset because our pool is green.
What type filter do you have? Sand, Diatomaceous earth, or cartridge filter?
I have a sand filter.
If you add chlorine and your water turns brown you need to make a filter from a sump pump, hose, a bucket, poly fill pillow material. You have to filter the iron out.