The best way is to keep them straight when stored. To this end you should go to a hard ware or plumbers supplier and get a piece of PVC sewer pipe wide enough and long enough to hold the hose. strap it along the fence and slide the hose into it. This will protect it from UV and keep it from getting that irritating shape memory that coils it up while you are trying to use it. Get a couple of caps to close the ends of the PVC pipe as well.
I do think that you need to change the Filter. It not suppose to be brown. You can buy them at any pool store in your area or retail store that sells pools.
pool whips are flexible hoses that move around the bottom of the pool to move dirt and alea towards the filter. They move from the force of the water spraying out of them.
Need to know what horse power you are thinking of. B T W the pump is not the filter. The filter is the large tank.
at ur local pool store!
Don' know how to store used filter sand, but a good question none the less :)
where can I find blues hoses that whip around the pool and clean it?
clean it out with a pool vacuum. it is about 20$ at the dollar store. You might want to buy a disposable paper filter and hose or a reusable sand filter and hose.
clean it out with a pool vacuum. it is about 20$ at the dollar store. You might want to buy a disposable paper filter and hose or a reusable sand filter and hose.
And the store did not tell you to add chlorine????
SHOCK!! Its a powder you can buy at a pool store or chemical store.. its chlorine in powder form, you just dump it in your pool stir it up a bit, wait a day or two, and the pool should be clean.
It is probably the crimped ends of the hoses leading to and from the oil filter housing. New hoses are available from your local auto parts store.
Have you tried a floculant. A floculant can be cast over the water and as it settles through the water it will take down with it materials that are suspended in the water.before adding it to the water turn of the pump and set it to waste,Leave the pool to settle for 2 days,Carefully vacuum the cloudy layer at the bottom of the pool to waste.You may have to repeat this procedure.Do not run the cloudy stuff on the bottom through the filterHummm, no one suggested running the filter 24/7. That may help. Sounds to me like a chemical problem. Pool water a teal color - sounds like a pH and/or an alkalinity problem. Have the water tested at the pool store. Didn't the pool store recommend running the filter longer???? hmmm. Do you have a sand filter or a D E filter. A sand filter will take longer to filter out the debris and algae than that of a D E filter.