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Can a Pool Really Pop Out of the Ground?

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Pool pop-ups are one of those pool industry fears that get repeated so often they start to sound inevitable, especially when a customer asks for a full drain to lower cyanuric acid, do an acid wash, or start over with fresh water. The truth is more practical and more technical: most concrete, plaster, or pebble pools are heavy enough that a pop-up is rare, but the risk rises when groundwater and saturated soil create upward buoyant force under an empty shell. If you’re a pool service professional, understanding the real mechanics behind “pool popping out of the ground” helps you make better calls, protect your customer’s property, and protect yourself from avoidable liability. The physics is simple but easy to underestimate. A typical 15,000-gallon pool holds well over 120,000 pounds of water, and that weight acts like an anchor. Once you drain it, you’re left with the shell weight alone, which might be closer to 10,000 to 15,000 pounds for a plaster pool. After heavy rain, especially ...

Pool Skimmer Tips That Actually Work

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A pool skimmer is the first line of defense for surface debris, and when it underperforms you feel it fast: leaves hover on top, bugs collect in corners, and the water looks “tired” even when chemistry is fine. Good skimming keeps debris from getting waterlogged and sinking, which also helps reduce bottom mess and the workload on your pool vacuum. Even on an infinity edge pool where builders sometimes skip skimmers for looks or because debris spills into a catch basin, a working skimmer can still play a vital role in day-to-day pool maintenance by keeping the surface cleaner between service visits. If you want to improve pool skimmer suction, start with circulation. In an ideal world, water movement pushes floating debris toward the skimmer in a predictable pattern, but many pools have dead spots where returns don’t move the surface enough. Adjusting return jets can help create a clockwise or counterclockwise sweep that guides debris across the surface and into the skimmer throat. On r...

How to Know When a Pool Filter Is Done

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Pool filter upgrades usually come down to one decision: does the system just need fresh filter media, or is the entire filter tank near the end of its life. “Filter media” is simply what does the actual trapping inside the filter, and it changes by type: cartridge filters use cartridges, DE filters use grids coated with DE powder, and sand filters use sand (sometimes glass media). Each option has a different lifespan, maintenance style, and failure mode, so smarter troubleshooting starts with matching your symptoms to the media. If your pool struggles to stay clear despite solid water chemistry, or you see steady pressure rise and poor circulation, that often points to filtration capacity, clogged media, or worn parts rather than a sanitizer problem. Sand filters are the trickiest to diagnose because the sand can seem “fine” for years, yet filtration can slowly degrade. Some owners never change sand, while others plan a five to eight year interval. A practical trigger is performance: i...

Before You Start a Pool Service Business, Listen to This

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Starting a pool service business sounds simple until you hear the warnings: most small businesses fail, there’s no safety net, and the pool industry has hidden hurdles. The truth is that “failure rates” often reflect bad execution, not bad markets. When an owner skips customer service, underestimates costs, or runs without a plan, the business bleeds out fast, just like any poorly run local shop. But a pool route in a solid area has durable demand, recurring monthly revenue, and clear ways to stand out through reliability. If you treat pool service like a real business with pricing discipline, scheduling, and communication, the odds shift strongly in your favor. A big fear is job security, especially with AI and automation. The episode makes a practical case: many office roles can be replaced quickly because software scales cheaply, while hands-on service work is harder to automate. Pools still need testing, chemical handling, equipment checks, and on-site problem solving. That doesn’t...

Residential vs. Commercial Pools: No Contest

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Residential pool service and commercial pool maintenance may look similar from the road, but they operate under totally different rules. A commercial pool is any pool used by a broader community like apartments, HOAs, hotels, the YMCA, or city facilities, and that definition instantly brings the county health department into the picture. Residential pool care usually happens behind a single-family home and is far less regulated, which means fewer third parties, fewer mandatory procedures, and fewer surprise shutdowns. For many pool pros, that lighter compliance load is the first big reason a residential pool service route feels easier to run and easier to scale without adding administrative drag.   Regulation changes everything in a pool care business. Commercial accounts can require CPO certification or county-specific credentials, along with strict safety codes and documentation. Health department inspection pressure adds a constant “must be perfect today” factor, because a ...

EPA vs. Sodium Bromide: The Real Story Part 2 of 2

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The sodium bromide debate in the pool industry often gets reduced to a scary word: bromate. But the real conversation is about exposure, how regulators model risk, and what happens when guidance is built on limited field data. Pool service professionals have used sodium bromide based algaecide products for decades, especially for stubborn yellow algae, and many were blindsided by the EPA-driven label language that says “not for use in outdoor pools.” That label shift sparked fear at distributors and on service trucks, even though the product remains legal to purchase. The bigger issue is how pool chemistry, real-world dosing, and actual human exposure differ from worst-case assumptions. A key scientific point raised is that bromate does not automatically equal harm at any detectable level, especially when exposure is tiny. The discussion leans on research suggesting the stomach’s hydrochloric acid can rapidly reduce a large share of trace bromate back into bromide, which is far less co...

EPA vs. Sodium Bromide: The Real Story Part 1 of 2

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The EPA interim decision on sodium bromide has sent a shock through the pool industry because it forces a label change that effectively removes outdoor pool use from products many pool service professionals relied on for fast algae knockdowns. If a sodium bromide-based algaecide now reads “not for use in outdoor pools,” distributors and retailers often stop stocking it entirely, even if the product chemistry did not suddenly change overnight. That’s why names like Yellow Treat and No More Problems keep coming up: they became shorthand for a simple, dependable algae treatment process that many technicians considered “bulletproof,” especially when paired with a strong liquid chlorine dose. A big piece of the controversy is bromate formation. Bromate is considered a probable human carcinogen, and the EPA’s interim approach assumes a worst-case scenario of 100% conversion from bromide to bromate in outdoor pools. Scott Hamilton explains that this is not chemically realistic, but it is cons...