3,000 dollars if you get from sunny pools i just got 3 tons of pool sand last week get the sand from sunny pools they love th4eir customers even if you are a bitch 3,000 dollars if you get from sunny pools i just got 3 tons of pool sand last week get the sand from sunny pools they love th4eir customers even if you are a bitch
Nothing if its a sand filter However if sand is coming into the pool from the filter then you may have to replace one ore more laterals in the sand filter as they have worn and are letting sand through to the pool,
The amount of sand in a pool filtration system depends on its size.
If you are getting sand coming into the pool and have a sand filter you may have to replace worn laterals in the sand filter.
To determine how much sand is needed for a 10,000-gallon pool, it depends on the type of pool and the depth of the sand layer desired. For a standard sand filter, you typically need about 1 pound of sand for every gallon of water, translating to roughly 10,000 pounds or about 5 tons of sand. However, if you're referring to a sand base for an above-ground pool, you'll need about 2-3 inches of sand, which would require around 1-2 tons of sand, depending on the pool's dimensions.
140# of sand is required.
For what? Building a cove for a vinyl liner. Adding sand to a sand filter. Building a sand box. For the base of a pool. ????
Your filter will tell you on the side of it how much media sand to put in it.
Sand dunes cost nothing, they are part of nature
Sand filters are not cleaned with chemicals . they are back washed when required. every four or five years it pays to replace the sand in a sand filter to maintain its efficiency.
It already is used as pool sand!
The sand has to be scooped out or can be shop wet vaced out. Replace with #20 silica sand only but first add water to the filter tank to about half way and cover the stand pipe in the middle of the filter so the sand will not spill into it. k
We did just that. I bought a small above ground pool for the kids last summer (15' diameter) and our yard wasn't level. Digging in the red clay proved impossible so we decided that instead of trying to lower the high end we'd raise the low end with sand. We bought mortar sand, not play sand, and spread it in the area that needed to be raised. Once you add water to the sand it stays in place very well. So well, in fact, that even after the pool was taken down the sand still stayed in place for months. The pool held up the entire summer but the cost of the sand was about as much as I spent on the pool (about $200).