You need to be a member of Pool Genius Network™ to add comments!
If you are a member of the "pool industry" community, you have found your home.
This is a network of pool builders, service professionals, retailers, and pool sales reps,…
Swimming pools are often associated with luxury, relaxation, and endless summer fun. But there's more than just the allure of crystal-clear water that leads a…
The Journal of the Swimming Pool and Spa Industry is coming back! JSPSI, a peer-reviewed technical journal, began in 1995 as a subscription-supported print-based publication. It contained articles at a technical…
All pool plaster finishes should last 20 years or more. However, some last only 5 to 7 years, and some less than a year before the plaster surface deteriorates, discolors, and looks terrible.
Why the difference? Very often, plaster…
For 50 years, the pool industry has considered pool water within an LSI of -0.3 and +0.5 to be acceptable and balanced. But recently, and without providing any supporting science or research, the NPC is trying to convince the industry that any…
There are two important issues involved when trying to achieve quality colored pool plaster that will remain durable, attractive, and the proper shade for many years.
The first issue is to utilize superior workmanship practices to achieve…
Replies
John MacTaggart said:
I've only seen the issue you are describing twice. Once was on a friends pool with watershears and when they would first start up the water would run down the front of the planters they were installed in and would gradually work it's way behind the liner and get trapped on the side wall in the pockets of the wall foam (it would take 4 - 6 months for a slight bubble to become visible). The only other time I saw it was on a job site with a builder I sell to and the pool had perimeter fiber-optics on it. I think he ultimately determined water was getting behind the liner/wall foam b/c the hole where the f/o cable ran back from the liner track to the light source wasn't sealed. I think he ultimately came to the conclusion that the gap was allowing water to leak behind the liner, sealed it and the problem went away. Other than that you got me stumped, but Lester's suggestion is a great one. At least then you'll know if the water is coming from the pool or not. The way the wall foam adhesive is laced when you spray it onto the wall forms all kinds of pockets where water from any source that gets behind the liner can run into and get trapped. If you get to the bottom of it please let me know what the actual solution is. I'd like to know in case I ever have a dealer that runs into a similar situation.
Thanks,
John
There are only three sources of water that can go behind a vinyl liner:
1) Pool water
2) Groundwater
3) Surface water
If you have eliminated the possibility of a liner/plumbing leak and groundwater, this only leaves the possibility of surface water, i.e. rain, sprinkler, or runoff. What typically happens in cases like this when the ground becomes saturated (think wet sponge) and cannot absorb anymore or percolate downward, the water lays and goes through the seams of the steel panels behind the liner as a result of the surrounding hydrostatic pressure.
Look for any kind of relationship between when it occurs and times of surface water accumulation.
John MacTaggart said: