Inground Pool Closing (Winterizing) DIY
- Locate all your winterizing supplies. This should include the cover, the
water tubes, the plugs for the skimmers (gizzmos) and return jets and your
winterizing chemicals. You will also need an air compressor or a powerful shop
vac. You need these items for proper winterization. If you are using the green
Gizzmos to plug your skimmers, check them out and make sure that they are not
cracked. This is very important when dealing with gizzmos. Gizzmos with holes
or cracks will not work !
- Backwash the filter very well to clean it out. Drain DE filter tanks and
leave backwash valve open. On sand filters, unplug the filter drain plug and
leave off. Put drain plug with other removed items in the pump basket. Make
sure multiport valve has no water in it. Blow it out with a compressor or shop
vac if necessary. Please note that it is not recommended to "acid wash" DE
filters at the time of the pool closing. This is best to do in the Spring so
that you can immediately run pool water through the system. It is not good to
use muriatic acid on a DE filter and then just rinse it off and put it away.
The acid may degrade the filter parts over the winter.
Hot Spot Pools and Spas offers Inground Pool closing services.
- Disconnect your pump and filter. Make sure that pump is totally drained
out of any water. Turn pump upside down once to make sure ! Remove any drain
plugs from the pump. It is a good idea to store any small plugs or parts in
the pump basket. This way you will be able to find them easily in the Spring.
- If there is a heater, drain it and make sure there is no sitting water
inside. Blow it out with a compressor or shop vac. Drain heater totally and
remove all drain plugs (if any). Put drain plugs in the pump basket for safe
keeping. We do not recommend to remove the heater tray. You can remove it if
you want, but you may have trouble putting it back in the Spring. It is not
necessary on most units.
- Unscrew and loosen any quick disconnect fittings or unions at your pump
and filter system. Remember, the name of the game is "no freeze cracks". If
the water is all drained out of your pipes and fittings, it cannot freeze and
expand and crack.
- Remove all return jet fittings (the entire fitting!). If you crack a
fitting while removing it, don’t panic!! You can get a replacement come
Spring. Remove all skimmer baskets. Put fittings and any other items that you
remove in one of the skimmer baskets or the pump basket to avoid loss (this
includes the dive board bolts too).
- Blow out all return jet pipes using an air compressor or shop vac. Hook up
air compressor or shop vac to the return lines at the filter system - or -
some people prefer to screw the compressor fitting into the drain plug of the
pump. This will give a good seal and allow you to blow out the entire system
from that one spot - but this is up to you. Keep the air blowing until the air
bubbles start to become visible from the return jets in the pool. Put a plug
in the fitting under the water when you see the bubbles blowing at full force.
This will mean that 99% of the water is out of the pipe. Make sure plug is in
tight ! This is most important.
- Blow out all skimmer (suction side) pipes in a similar fashion as noted in
#7. Put a Gizzmo-type screw in plug in the skimmer when bubbles start to
become visible. We know that this is sometimes difficult, but proper gizzmo
installation is important. Make sure that you put PTFE tape on the gizzmo
threads before installing. This insures a tight seal. If you don not want to
use Gizzmo plugs and want to use black rubber-type plugs instead, that is OK
as long as there is something in the skimmer to allow for water expansion when
it freezes. Usually a closed plastic empty soda-type bottle will work. This is
very important ! Do not just plug the skimmer lines and forget about them.
Water can easily freeze in a skimmer and crack the plastic. This would be bad
! Also, if you have a slide, an auto vac system or a waterfall, you will have
to drain and blow out those pipes as well. Remember - we do not recommend
putting anti-freeze type products in the pipes. You will not need it if the
lines are properly blown out. The anti-freeze can cause a mess in the Spring
when you go to start your system and it gets sucked into your filter and blown
back into the pool. Try to avoid antifreeze - if possible - by properly
evacuating all the water from the pipes.
- Blow out main drain line (if any). No, you don’t have to dive down and
plug the drain pipe. When you see bubbles coming out of the drain, plug the
pipe on your end or close the gate valve. This is as much protection as you
can give to a main drain line. By doing this you will cause an "air lock" in
the line and no more water should enter the pipe from the pool side.
- Put duct tape on all exposed pipes to prevent anything from getting into
them. Use a lot of tape, it’s cheap!
- Remove rope and floats from pool and put with the rest of the supplies.
- Remove dive board and ladders. Put in a safe spot - a shed or the garage.
Put the pump and filter in the shed or garage as well. You probably are not
going to want to move your filter if it is a sand filter. You can leave that
outside! Remember do not lose dive bolts or ladder bumpers. Put them in the
skimmer or pump baskets.
- Mix any granular winterizing chemicals in a bucket so that they are
totally dissolved. Dump mixture into the pool. You want to avoid any
undissolved granules from settling on the pool floor and staining the liner.
This is very important. If you are using any liquid winterizing chemicals,
pour them in the pool as well. Test the pool for pH and Total Alkalinity.
Adjust to normal levels using pH PLUS or MINUS and ALKALINITY PLUS. pH should
be between 7.2 - 7.6 and Alkalinity between 100-150 ppm. Make sure one of your
winterizer chemicals consists of a SHOCK-type product. You want the chlorine
level in the pool to be rather high (over 3.0 for wintertime).
- Water level. This is an area of a little controversy with some people, so
we are going to tell you how we close the pools here in New York. You do not
have to drain any water out of the pool provided that you have properly blown
out and plugged all your underground pipes as outlined above and you do not
have a pool that has decorative ceramic tiles at the water line. Some people
are used to their pool being drained down past the skimmer. This is usually
done instead of blowing out the pipes and using gizzmos. Realize that the
higher their water level is through the winter, the better it is for the pool
cover. Pools that are drained down low cause a lot of undue stress on the pool
cover thereby shortening its life - as well as exposing the pool liner to the
air and causing it to prematurely dry out. The use of gizzmos prevents the
skimmers from cracking, plugs the pipes and allows the water level to remain
high for the cover so that rain water does not cause a lake on top of the pool
cover - possibly causing it to fall in. We feel that the way we have stated to
close a pool is the proper way. You really only have to drain the water down
in a pool if it has tile at the water level because the surface water will
freeze and expand over the winter and this could cause those tiles to crack.
Aside from this situation, we feel that there is no valid reason to lower the
water in the pool. Also, you do not have to remove or "lower" the pool light
provided that you keep your water at the normal level.
- Place the cover on the pool. If there are rips or tears in the cover that
are repairable, patch them with either vinyl pool patch (for vinyl covers) or
with pool cover patch tape ( for lightweight covers) or with a heavy duty
duct-type tape. Remember, if your cover was declared legally dead a few years
ago then patching probably is not the right thing to do ! It is probably time
to get a new cover. If there are sharp points that extend into the pool, like
step units or "ELS", then it is a good idea to put rags or cardboard between
the cover and the points on the pool which extend out. Do this right or the
cover may rip on those stress points.
- If you use water tubes, lay out the water tubes, placing them through
loops on cover. Fill tubes with water to approx. 85% and tightly seal all
tubes. Do not overfill the tubes - when they freeze you do not want them to
expand and split. Tubes should ideally be touching each other end to end.
However spacing them one (1) foot apart is OK. If you find that tubes are
leaking do not fill them. Replace them with new. It is not a good idea to
patch the old tubes unless you absolutely have to. Remember...do not overfill
tubes. They should not be totally filled with water. Allow enough slack in the
tube for water expansion!
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