Im afraid a little more information is going to be needed to answer this question. What kind of wall, above ground, inground? Steel or polymer, and what exactly is wrong with it?
Replace the liner. k
Krylon
Most likely ... yes.
Yes, a bulge in a polymer pool wall can often be repaired. The best course of action would be to consult a professional pool repair service to assess the extent of the damage and recommend the appropriate repair method, which may involve draining the pool, reshaping the wall, and reinforcing it to prevent future bulging.
Its not worth the risk, the wall strength has been destroyed, I would not trust it, if you get too much activity in the pool, it is safe too say the side will bust out, and what and whoever is in the pool is coming out with the water.
This is a run on sentence and makes no sense ... see the corrected version.
opening a pool is different then closing a pool because opening the pool is when the pool is all filled up with water an fixed an has chlorine in it and closing the pool is if u don't have no chlorine in it and it is not fixed or don't have no water in it
A crack in the pool pump can not be fixed permanently. Silicone and sealants may fix it temporarily, but it will need to be replaced.
As long as the floor: in other words, wall to wall.
Hydralic cement?
The opposite of buckled (strapped in, or bent) would be "unbuckled."The word buckled as in bent or deformed could have the opposites "straight" or "unbent."
A sport wall is a temporary wall or boom that is placed in the swimming pool to shorten the length of the pool to make it regulation length for a swimming competition. Some 50m pools hold 'short course' competition and the regulation length is 25m so the pool needs a wall to measure this length in order for the competition to be official.