wrinkles in the liner are impossible to remove after the pool is filled. It's a loosing battle. Only two options. #1- if the wrinkles are small just enjoy the pool. Next time you fill the pool have the kids work the wrinkles out as you fill it. #2- If the wrinkles are "over lapping" drain the pool and start over. The water bill is much cheaper than a new liner. Good Luck hope this will help. R.B.
Above ground pool? First, it's almost impossible with the water in it. The water is too heavy. So, drain water down to appropriate level. Remove the top rails and liner keepers one or two at a time. Pull up on the liner and get as many creases out as possible. Replace rails and keepers ase you go. note: You won't get all the wrinkles out and the longer they've been there, the harder it will be. On the floor of the pool, if you have more then 7-8 inches of water in it, you won't be able to pull the wrinkles out. Water is too heavy.
If you have had the liner in there for a short period of time and the creases or wrinkles are on the floor, I would drain the water down to about 1 to two inches of water in the liner. Get inside the pool with bear feet and grab the liner with your feet pulling the wrinkles to the edge of the pool wall. The weight of the water that is left in the pool will help hold the wrinkles out while you pull them to the wall. Once you have gotten all or as many of them out as you can then you can refill your liner. If the liner has been in there for a long time it will be impossible to remove all the wrinkles due to the liner being shaped that way for an extended period of time.
If they are on the wall you would have to drain the water and remove the top rails. Move around the outside of the pool pulling down on the liner on the outer top edge of the pool. This will help to bring the liner higher up the wall and help pull the wrinkles out. You then would do the same thing listed above for the floor.
If you have a beaded liner and the wrinkles are on the wall this means your cove at the inside bottom of the wall, between the wall and liner, may be to high. To fix this you would have to drain the water all the way down, pull the liner back from the wall, exposing the sand underneath the liner, and "cut" the cove down some or remove some of the cove, to reduce the height. Return the liner to the wall and add about 2 inches of water across the entire bottom of the floor. Then you can start pulling the liner with your feet like earlier, removing the wrinkles. NOTE you still might not be able to eliminate all the wrinkles.
This is a really hard thing to do, especially if it is full of water. The best way is to monitor it as it is filling and pull/tighten the liner as it fills up. Keep the edges tight but not secure and let the weight of the water pull it down into the contours. You should always keep the edge retainer a bit loose as it is filling so the liner does not stretch out. I am guessing you want to know how to do it when it is full. I have done it but it took quite a while, most of it spent underwater. What I did was to go under and move the wrinkle inch by inch toward the nearest edge by pulling it in the desired direction taking into account for the direction of the wrinkle. The wrinkle may travel in a sideways direction depending on how the slack was gained. Once you get it to the side, work it up the edge to the top, then undo the top clamp and pull the extra over and reapply the clamp. Sometimes while trying to remove one wrinkle you will make another, it is because the bottom is uneven and the liner has quite a bit of weight on it.
== Is the water in?== Once the water's in, you're cooked.
Justin Bieber has a inground pool
If your pool has been filled with water, The wrinkles will not come out. And I do not understand the other part of the question.could you be more specific it does not sound correct that there be a gap at waterline.
How big is the star dust inground swimming pool.
They will most likely work, they just have to have the same specifications.
The wrinkles are there to provide for liner shrinkage over the years.
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?
Outdoor pool Inground pools.
I have etching in my inground concrette pool and i need to know how to fix it. the pool was made in 1973 i bought the house three years ago.
One can get good inground swimming pool by acquiring good inground swimming pool kits. These kits are available online and simple internet search can give you contact details of manufacturer and supplier of good inground swimming pool kits.