My yard slopes a little bit. I take a garden hose or lately, my vacuum hose and run water in from the outside end until the hose is completely full. I drain it to the lowest part of my yard. You can stop running water in when no more bubbles come out into the pool. I secure a heavy wrench onto the pool end of the hose to keep it underwater. This will drain the majority of the pool. Then I have a small fish pond pump that I use for the rest of the water. This is very slow, I imagine if you have a pump to remove water from a cover, it would work as well. Good luck.
With a filter, vacuum, skimmer net, brush and water sanitizer like chlorine to get the exact details have a talk with your local pool shop.
Get the garden hose, run it from the pool to a drain and siphon the water out.
After the sump pump has remove all it can there is little left , I suppose you could mop it up or use a sponge and bucket. But really it's not enough to matter for most senarios.
you can use a vacuum or cup
Yes
Usa a shop vac.
Justin Bieber has a inground pool
Theoreticaly Yes
How big is the star dust inground swimming pool.
Vacuum the pool to waste and/or empty the pool and shovel out the gunk. Sounds like the pool needs to be emptied anyway, so give it a chlorine wash (or acid wash) while its empty and then refill, add salt, install the necessary equipment and start over with a saline pool.
They will most likely work, they just have to have the same specifications.
make sure u remove the plug in the drain at the bottom of the pool,this allows any water that may have accumulated under the pool from seepage to evaporate and equalizes the pressure that may be created by emptying ur pool. You will need to go to Lowe's or Home Depot and buy a high power pump to empty the pool. Also you will need an unclogged drain near the pool for all the water to empty into.
There are several variables that affect the overall cost of building and maintaining an inground pool, including the size of the pool and the material will comprise it. In the Chicagoland area a small, basic inground pool will cost between $20,000 and $50,000. Some of the larger, deeper and more high-end inground pools can cost as much as $100,000. Factors into the Cost of the Pool: Size, Region, Materials, Add-on. Ways to Reduce Your Inground Pool Cost: Buy Off-Season, Shop Around, Do It Yourself.
trading
You certainly can.
are you a pool dealer? What state are you in?