Yes, But it may be too soft and puncture easily.
Not financially sound. It would be better to keep the dogs out.
No. Replace the liner.
Well first of all there is no such thing as a fiberglass pool. You can have fiberglass walls instead of steel but your pool is still vinyl because you need a liner. These are the usual combinations of inground pools. Sand floor, steel walls, vinyl liner Sand floor, fiberglass walls, vinyl liner Vermiculite floor, steel walls, vinyl liner Vermiculite floor, fiberglass walls, vinyl liner Concrete floor, steel walls, vinyl liner Concrete floor, fiberglass walls, vinyl liner Concrete floor, concrete walls, no liner Concrete pools have to be painted with epoxy paint or if you want tile installed then usually you plaster over the concrete. Now a days 3 and 4 are the most common inground installs. 1 and 2 are usually pools that are 30 + years old although you can still have them done that way. In South Alabama the cost of a 20 *40 vinyl pool will cost around 18 to 22 thousand
Filter it then swim in it.
They don't make them for in ground.
air pocket behind pool liner inground
This would be the the excact same price as building a new concrete pool minus some excavation. you would be looking in the 30-to 40k range.
Remove the old damaged liner and install a new one.
I had an inground pool installed. We just turned on the lights at night and noticed footprints on the bottom. Can this be fixed? Call the pool company back. The bottom is normally sand mixed with cement. The liner will probably have to be removed and bottom smoothed. They should have checked that before installing the liner. Those printswi catch sediment and debris for the life of the liner.
YES.
It's certainly worth a try. I would use Aqua Seal or Seal All. -Both available in Walmart.
Yes, but it would be very expenses..