Depends on the type of pool and location. A concrete or fiberglass pool should have much problem temporarily, in norther climates or in an area with high water tables both could "float" basically the frost or high water could push the shell out of the ground, in some cases ever a few feet. This is a huge problem, with a massive cost to fix. Vinyl Liner pools don't have exactly that same risk but without the weight of the water holding the liner in place it can shift and/or crack (for older liner) and will no longer be useful. I'd advise against it, it is a bit unsafe as well, someone could get hurt falling in!
Vacuum the pool. If you have to drain it, only drain it half way. Floating pools are a disaster.
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Why would you drain your pool just becasue the water is hot? Never drain your inground pool unless you have first cut holes in the bottom of the pool to keep it from floating. If the water table in your area is high enough, your inground pool could "float" out of the ground, effectively ruining your pool.
Justin Bieber has a inground pool
you can back wash the pool and drain to proper level Throw a pool party with lots of energetic kids.
NO however you should keep in mind that the ground water outside of the pool is not going to put pressure on it as this is capable of even lifting a concrete pool out of the ground.
No, then you have to refill it and that is a waste of water If it is an inground pool being dry will ruin the pool surface and in high water table areas the risk of turning it into a boat is very real.
How big is the star dust inground swimming pool.
They will most likely work, they just have to have the same specifications.
There are several variables that affect the overall cost of building and maintaining an inground pool, including the size of the pool and the material will comprise it. In the Chicagoland area a small, basic inground pool will cost between $20,000 and $50,000. Some of the larger, deeper and more high-end inground pools can cost as much as $100,000. Factors into the Cost of the Pool: Size, Region, Materials, Add-on. Ways to Reduce Your Inground Pool Cost: Buy Off-Season, Shop Around, Do It Yourself.
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You certainly can.