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NewGuy
 
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Willshak,

Thank you. That is exactly info I was looking for.

Thank you very much.


"willshak" wrote in message
...
NewGuy wrote:

Yes, I do have a "Gizmo" in my skimmer. But should you drain pipes before
putting gizmo in? If yes, then were water come into skimmer so quickly?
There were no rain?

I have an inground pool with two skimmers. I try to blow as much water out
of the lines as I can before putting antifreeze in the pipes. You'll
notice that there is a plastic plug in the top of the Gizmo. I screw the
Gizmo in, remove that plug and then blow the lines. The water will spray
out of that hole in the top of the Gizmo. A small amount of water will
fall back into the skimmer from the spray. I just leave it there. If that
water bothers you, take a wetvac to it or towel it out. I don't know what
your pool company did, or if they left that water in there. I do my own
pool closing, so I know what I did, or didn't do.

Thanks
"willshak" wrote in message
...

willshak wrote:


NewGuy wrote:


Hi,

My pool company just winterized my pool but I am interested in one
thing. They did such some water out of the skimmer and then they pluged
line that goes to pool bottom and then put Gizmo into the line that
goes into pump. But just a few minutes after that I can see that now
there is again small amount of water at the bottom of the skimmer. Is
there something wrong with that? Should skimmer be free of water? How
do you winterize skimmer?

Thanks


I have these blue plastic bottle things that screw into the skimmer
outlet at the bottom of the skimmer. When screwed in, they come to
within a couple of inches from the skimmer top. They have a pop out top
so that you can blow the water out of the pool lines with a shop vac set
to blower. Makes a nice "Old Faithful" type of geyser spray out the top.
You will never keep water out of the skimmer, because the weight of the
snow and ice on top of the pool cover will cause the pool water to rise
and go into the skimmer inlet. Last fall, we emptied the water to below
the skimmer inlet, or about 15" from the top of the pool. This spring,
the water from the rain, and melted snow, and rain again, had risen to
within 6" of the pool top and also in the skimmer. The bottle thing is
soft enough to take the expansion of the ice that forms in the skimmer
and protect the harder skimmer plastic from cracking. Been using them
for about 15 years now.

Looked after I posted. Here they a
http://www.poolandspa.com/catalog/pr...0252000029.cfm