Yes you can. I recently used it to clean my Metal Frame Intex pool. It is 12' x 30" and you couldn't aatach a skimmer and good vaccum to the filter. So I had all the dead algae sitting on the bottom and the pool still looked green. I took the Shop Vac out and cleaned the bottom of the pool with it. Just remember you can do one pass and the housing will fill with water and make sure the drain plug is removed as well as the filter.
No!!
The best way to clean a pool with dried out leaves on the bottom is to fill the pool about an inch deep and allow enough time for the leaves to loosen up. Once the leaves are floating loose, take a wet and dry vacuum and suck out the leaves and water together.
The most important supplies for your pool will be the chemicals to treat your pool on a daily basis and a good skimmer or net to collect leaves and other debris on the surface of the pool. It is also important to have tubing that can be used to vacuum or an actual pool vacuum to suck up leaves that get stuck at the bottom ever couple of months. You will need chlorine,baquacil or some other form of water sustaining chemical. Also baking soda should be very important to the care of a pool it can be used in place of other chemicals that are much more expensive to buy.
the leaves are o the stem and leaves suck in all the light and produce photosynthesis from glucose
yes
A good way for getting sand out of a sand filter is to get a sand venturi with this attached to the end of a garden hose you will be able to suck all of the sand out of the unit easily. Check with your pool shop as they may be able to sell, hire or lend one to you.
the Spell chansweris to suck up the water
The pool pump does suck the water from the pool. Then it goes thru the filter and (if you use have the following) thru the heater and chlorinator then back into the pool. So - nothing will keep it from sucking water from the pool - but that's a good thing. Now - if you set the valve to a different setting - then it might actually send the water to a waste line - maybe that's what you meant. If that's the case -then the pool pump will eventually drain your whole pool if you have it set to get the water from the bottom drain (another valve).
Bitchesf suck fdick
Bitchesf suck fdick
Cell sap
Yes, of course.
I used a wet vacuum (shop vac) to suck out the rest of the water. It took awhile (numerous 10 gallon canisters worth) but it also vacuumed up the debris so the pool was nice and clean when done.