My belief is that you should run it only enough to keep the pool floor clean. Some cleaners have flapping feet or other parts to make them move. Those tend to wear out faster than the ones with wheels, so I usually recommend they run only as needed (usually an hour or two per day) The pools that have wheeled cleaners I let the sweep run the whole time the pool is running. If you have a variable speed or two speed pump let the pump run at low speeds without the cleaner most of the time, then high speed for an hour or two with the cleaner on.
What about "sweep a new pool surface"?
As long as the sun is up.
3 hrs
Long enough to turn over the full amount of water in the pool every 24 hours.
run, course, rush, sweep, move, pass, roll, flood, pour, sweep
sweep it and put soap and water on a wash rag
most pools run somewhere between 6 and 8 hours. this can be changed depending on the season an the load that the pool gets in impurity's.
No, the word "sweep" does not have a long vowel sound. The vowel sound in "sweep" is a short /i/ sound as in "sit" or "lip".
The suction side cleaner - pool vac - may have air entrapped inside the housing. Inverting it while still under water may work.
Same thing consider the following Long turn ell ( Sweep) regular sweep and short sweep = 1/4 bend all are 90 degree fittings
I seriously doubt that the pool sweep is the problem here with your stains. You will have to describe the stains in order to get to the root of the problem. Are the stains: Rust color or brown? Black or gray? Green? Blue? Are the stains consistent or uniform? Are they all over the pool? Do they cover the whole pool or are they in small patches? Answer these questions and I may be able to tell you the cause. k
This depends largely on how much use it gets or how much dust and impurity's are blown or dropped into the pool. if you have a salt water pool then you have to run it long enough to generate enough chlorine to keep the chlorine up. If it is an ordinary fresh water pool then usually some where between 6 and 8 hours per day on average.