I HAVE THIS PROBLEM. THE POOL PRO I SPOKE TO SAID IT IS A PROBLEM AND IT NEEDS TO BE REMOVED. A GARDEN HOSE ATTACHED TO A PUMP BEHIND THE LINER IN A CORNER SHOULD DO IT ACCORDING TO HIM. IF IT IS A PERSISTENT PROBLEM YOU NEED TO DO IT WEEKLY.
Had a vinyl liner pool 21 yrs and always have water behind liner after a major rain or water the flowers too long. We installed a PVC pipe in the corner with a cap on the end with pencil size holes drilled in the cap.Then cut a hole in the steel wall and under the walk way around the pool and attached a water hose to the end coming out with a water hose and use a utility pump to pump the water from behind the liner to a drain pipe running in a ditch away from the pool. It's a pain..but the water weight in the pool is not surpose to allow the water behind the liner to rise, but guess what?... is does. Only thing we can come up with is we have clay all the way down and have sometype of pooling to the hole. We are installing French ddrains around the pools sides this summer.Good luck with your problem with water behind the liner!
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.
air pocket behind pool liner inground
By the liner bulging, I assume you are refering to water behind the liner due to excessive hydrostatic pressure. To correct, you need to remove the excess water. You need a pump and a length of smooth flexible hose, spa flex is best. 1. Unhook the liner from the bead receptor in shallow end of pool 2. Place hose into the water behind the liner (towards the bottom of the pool wall) 3. attach hose to front of the pump 4. Attach another hose to the discharge side of the pump 5. start pump and send discharged water back into the pool. 6.use a pool brush to carefully smooth the liner back into place. 7. When water recedes slowly pull suction hose from behind the liner. Note:You do not want to remove all the water just the majority of it. Otherwise it will be difficult to remove the hose. The remainder of the water behind the liner will disipate as the ground dries and the liner watyer pressure pushes it out..
If water is getting behind the liner, sorry to say you have a leak. This will also cause wrinkles. Check around main drain if you have one.
You could try spraying straight bleach from a spray bottle, and then rinse with either reverse-osmosis or distilled water.
Rain. It's normally just ground water that takes a while to drain away. You may also have a hole you haven't detected. It happened to me. I will agree to the leak answer but not the rain. There are a few scenario's to think about. If you have an inground pool and your pulling the liner out of the track and you see water actually behind the liner, and im not talking just because the wall is wet, im saying if there is actually standing water behind the liner, you have a leak, and most likely its a hole or holes in your liner. Now if you feel water under the liner on the floor, which should only be in the deep end, then you could either have a hole or holes in the liner, and the water hasn't soaked into the ground which if you have a concrete bottom then most likely its not gonna soak up anywhere unless it makes its way torwards the pool walls. And besides if you have an inground that is FULL of water, its impossible for any ground water or water from leaks to stand behind your liner. There is more pressure from a full pool of water then what is being pushed up from ground water, therefore your pool water will push all that water in the ground and you wont feel a thing. The ONLY way your gonna know if you have high water is either A: you know for a fact that you do or B: you start to drain your water out of the pool and you see the liner starting to float on the deep end floor. But you shouldn't be draining your pool completely out if you have liner anyways. The water is whats holding that liner in place and if you drain it out, your risking that it moves, and you cant get it back into place and you end up with wrinkles everywhere or worst case it rips by chance. Any company that installs liners uses special vacs to hold liners in place while its filling and stretching to the shape of the pool. Now your WORST nightmare of draining your pool out is if you do have high water and you drain it out, your risking the high water breaking the bottom of your pool floor and even the slopes ultimately leading to your pool quite possibly caving in. I've worked on pools and installed pools for 10 years and trust me I've seen it happen. But the best answer to your question would most likely be you have a hole or holes that is causing it. Simple way to find out but is time consuming is get some colored die, doesnt matter which, and dive around the area where you know you see the water behind the liner and die test the liner and see if any of the die goes through any holes. You found the problem then. There are pipes running next to the pool. Some of which pull the water to the pump for filtration or vacuuming . Others bring the water back to the pool through the jets. There could be cracks in the pipes causing the problem. Around my pool there were two pipes that were cracked and the water made its way behind the line. It was obvious that the pipes were broken for a long time because the water had created a underground cavity right next to the pool. So that is something else you can look into.
The tragic story behind the sinking of the cruise liner Titanic is that on her maiden voyage, she struck an iceberg. A flaw in the design system of the cruise liner was that there were not enough life boats, and 1552 passengers perished.
In the trunk behind the trunk liner on the right side ( passenger side ) There is an access hole in the trunk liner
No
The Titanic was a luxury liner.The liner to my pool has split and it is now leaking water.
the battery is in the trunk on the passenger side behind the liner
The pool water draws its color from the liner. If you buy a white liner, then the pool water will not be blue. If you use a light blue liner, then the pool will be light blue. In my opinion, the best liner is a darker blue liner with ripples on it. Your pool will look gorgeous and inviting and the ripple effect makes it difficult to see any dirt in your pool. A solid color liner lets you see everything, which isn't always pretty.