Yes, you can use chlorine in a fiberglass pool. It is a common sanitizer for pools and helps to keep the water clean and free of bacteria. Just be sure to follow the manufacturer's guidelines for the proper amount of chlorine to use in your fiberglass pool to prevent damage.
NO Fiberglass salt water pools are a great system regardless of where you use them.
That depends on what is available in your area. whatever you use it wont make any difference where you use it.
removing superglue can be tough. first up, make sure the shower surface is gelcoat. if it is then it's safe to use acetone to clean the superglue from the surface. test it with a rag damped with acetone in an inconspicuous area to be sure before you attack the superglue area.
Some advantages of fiberglass over other pool types include the quick installation since the pool is factory built. Also, they are easier to clean, use less chemicals and electricity for heating than concrete models.
Cracks in fiberglass pool steps can be repaired yes and just like new. You may have a liner pool with a fiberglass step or a straight fiberglass pool no matter which one you have, you will want to investigate the reason for the crack and if it is caused by pool backfill or other causes then address that before a cosmetic or structural repair can be expected to be successfull. This may be a job for a pool professional ie: Poolstepspecialists.com. You will also find most quality fiberglass pool manufacturers have repair teams which can assist your repair in the field for a reasonable cost or may qualify as warranty work, since things like defects can be part of a lifetime warranty program. Your swimming pool professional will also have the knowledge and tools for a permanent repair. One last note if your pool has also developed a leak run dont walk for a timely repair before you end up with even more problems, because you waited. good swimming getapool.com
Use acetone. If you don't have acetone, use nail polish remover. It has acetone in it.
If it's silicone, as is likely, then get most of it off with a sharp edge of a craft knife and the rest with acetone or lacquer thinner on a rough rag.
There are special cleansers for that that are sold at all pool supply stores. And you can use a small hand held scrub brush with any household cleaners. scrub them
Best answer.... Don't fiberglass... Fiberglass pools come as one structure. Replaster or get a new liner....
It would depend on what kind of an in-ground pool you refer to, i.e. gunite, concrete, block, vinyl liner, wood, or fiberglass.
Hum, I am not an expert on this but it seems to me that the vessel would need lots of support to keep from flexing with the weight and with heavy use. k