yes
As of July 2014, the market cap for Pool Corporation (POOL) is $2,498,512,422.73.
We have the metal type and our drain valve is located right near the bottom very close to the area where the higher filter port sits. There is an outside and an inside cap, so you will have to actually get into the pool to remove the inner cap.... something we didn't bargain for when taking ours down. Hope that helps.
No. Just don't drain on other people's lawns.
Where is the drain located? If it is on the wall near the top then you can keep the water in the pool. If it is near the bottom then you may have to drain the pool.
No
Vacuum the pool. If you have to drain it, only drain it half way. Floating pools are a disaster.
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.
you could drain the pool, but if you don't want to drain your pool, you could get a pool skimmer and get all of the leaches out of your pool and then carry the leaches to a near by sewer, or a murky pond/lake/river.
If its not connected through the skimmer I imagine it's there to empty it. hmmm, on the above. The main drain in pools is for circulating the lower part of the pool and is not intended to drain the pool as in a bath tub.
Drain it.
I don't know about your pool I do know however that most pool don't have a way out for the water other then through the static skimmer. and people often mistake the hydrostatic valve at the bottom of the pool as the pool drain
Trick question. The pool is empty but the drain is open. With an open drain, the pool will never fill, unless the water entering exceeds the water draining.True,-----------> 20 hours