We used Garrett Vinyl Pools they have been around for years.
No. Replace the liner.
Garret Vinyl Pools Inc. 281-855-7000
what you can do in this situation depends on what is under the vinyl liner now.
YES.
If you have water behind your vinyl in ground pool liner, you should first lower the water in the pool to normal levels if it is over-filled. Make sure that the vacuum pipe is clear, unclog it if it is not. Once it is unblocked let the water from behind the liner flow out.
Well first of all there is no such thing as a fiberglass pool. You can have fiberglass walls instead of steel but your pool is still vinyl because you need a liner. These are the usual combinations of inground pools. Sand floor, steel walls, vinyl liner Sand floor, fiberglass walls, vinyl liner Vermiculite floor, steel walls, vinyl liner Vermiculite floor, fiberglass walls, vinyl liner Concrete floor, steel walls, vinyl liner Concrete floor, fiberglass walls, vinyl liner Concrete floor, concrete walls, no liner Concrete pools have to be painted with epoxy paint or if you want tile installed then usually you plaster over the concrete. Now a days 3 and 4 are the most common inground installs. 1 and 2 are usually pools that are 30 + years old although you can still have them done that way. In South Alabama the cost of a 20 *40 vinyl pool will cost around 18 to 22 thousand
Inground vinyl is better, their is less exposed part to the oxigene, therefore, last longer.
Beautiful and cute print vinyl pool liners are available aplenty online. You check up at any of these sites that sell a variety of vinyl pool liner: http://www.poolwarehouse.com/inground-pool-liners.html; http://www.pooldeals.com/catalog/Pool-Liners-p-1-c-314.html; http://www.websweeper.com/php/pool_section/pool.php AND http://www.bizrate.com/swimming-pools-jacuzzis/pool-liner/
no on paint! You will need to replace the liner.
Cannot be answered without further information. What is the adhesive? Are you under water or dry? Is it a tile or marcite surface? Please asvise
That would be a pool company.. Now there are dozens of coping styles and sizes, so take one of the old one with you..
Vinyl liner pools normally develop holes from some type of abuse, usually something is poked, jabbed, stepped on or scraped causing a hole. On rare occasions a seam can split open. Chemical abuse is another cause. To repair, YOU may try a vinyl liner repair kit from your local pool store or YOU may call a swimming pool leak detection company in your area.