The walls are exactly 48" high and the bead receiver sits at 47" from the base of the wall. The sand base is basically right at the bottom of the wall, so I know I need to add a fair amount of sand and build up a cove.
My big concern now is how much do I have to bring up the floor of the pool and how high should the cove be built up? Is there a lot of 'play' in beaded liners? Would you recommend using a peel and stick type cove or is it enough to build it out of sand? There is no way of knowing how the liner is going to fit until you try it. You might add a cove and then wish you had not because the liner is baggy on the sides. I would start with a fairly small cove, about the size of the preformed ones.
If the liner appears to be too small you can always add more. You will get a much better fit if the liner has to stretch a little bit. What you don't want is a liner that is too big for the pool leaving a mess of wrinkles that you can not get out. I have just changed my 30ft round pool liner from jhook to standard beaded liner. The bead receiver that I purchased is plastic while the old receiver is medal. Will the plastic receiver be enough to keep my pool stable or do I need to put something else on there?
Install as conventional Beaded Liner. Now you are ready to attach the wall of the liner to the pool. You should attach the liner on the wall in about the 6 or 8 places. On ovals, start at the beginning of each radius in 4 places and then in the center of the two radius areas and straight sides. On round pools, begin at the 3. Using masking or electrical tape, if necessary, to hold the liner in place.
Make sure that you attach the wall perpendicular to the floor of the pool. If you have someone else helping you, start from any two positions 9 and 3 or 12 and 6 and work the liner onto the wall from each until they come together. Print Guide. See All Steps. Step by Step. If you use a knife to open the box, be very careful that you don't cut the liner.
Check the liner seams and surfaces for tears and holes. It's easier to fixed then now than in the pool. These styles are shown here. The liner bead will be snapped into this track. This is a larger, thicker beads that will not fit into standard bead receiver tracks. The Liner warranty covers seam separation and manufacturer's defects only. Natural wear and tear due to exposure to the elements is not covered. The warranties have two parts; 'Full' means that if your liner is defective, and it is deemed to be covered under warranty, your cover will be replaced at no charge.
After the full warranty period, the warranty is pro-rated and you will receive a certain percentage off the current purchase price of another cover. The purchaser will be responsible for any shipping and handling fees for the replacement in either part.
Pool Pads. Provides an important protective layer between a vinyl swimming pool liner and it's sand or soil base. This acts as a vapor barrier to keep potentially harmful water away from metal components. In addition, liner failure due to puncture is minimized and heat retention is improved.
Wall Foam. Wall foam is padding that helps to create a smooth wall surface while preventing rust, corrosion, and other wall degradation from puncturing your liner. Wall Foam can be used on above ground and inground liner pools.
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