In a word, no. In fact, if the pool is vinyl or fiberglass (or you live in an area with a high water table) draining ANY pool is not a good idea. A drained pool can pop out of the ground or the liner can be ruined unless special precautions are taken.
IF you live in an area that gets hard freezes a pool needs to be winterized but that is not the same as draining it. Since salt pools do not use stabilized chlorine then they do not become overstabilzed. The only reason water partial replacement might be needed is if the calcium hardness is very high and this often involves trucking in softer water is the supply water is very hard. (however, in areas with high calcium hardness, such as Arizona, there are companies that can 'process' the water in the pool to remover the excess calcium so water replacement might not be neceessary)
saltwater in a pool should be drained every couple of months make sure to have it balanced with other chemicals too -lola5597
The water can be drained outwith a hose.
Yes, drained above ground pools are not structurally able to handle wind loads. The water helps the pool maintain its' shape.
However long it takes until you have drained the pool and disinfected everything, filled it back up and tested the water.
Fill it back up?
Most likely ... yes.
Pool guy needs to find new profession; you need to learn how to describe scenerios properly.
I cant see why it should be drained and given a chlorine bath at all. If there is no problem with the water or the looks of the pool leave it alone.
600 US quarts = 150 US gallons
The pool probably should not have been drained until the ground had a chance to drain. The weight if the water in the pool helps to support the wall againt the groundwater pressure.
The pool, filter, and pump all need to be drained. If it is a soft sidered pool, it should be collapsed and covered with a tarp. If hardside pool, cover will a pool cover once drained down.
Vegetable oil is relatively to get out of a pool that is filled with water. The oil does not mix with water and will stay on the top layer. It can either be scooped out in a cup or the pool can be drained and refilled.
A drained swimming pool will be more dangerous to anyone who could fall into the pit. The pool will need fencing around it that is sturdy and anti-tamper proof. What are your plans for rain water when it fills during a storm? What are your plans for when you have a lot of rain and the water table surrounding the pool rises enough to make the pool float out of the ground????