![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Last spring I spent a couple of months finding leaks in my liner and
patching them. Each leak involved raising the water, waiting a few days for the leak to lower the level, then gentle inspecting the perimeter of the new water level to find the leak (pond is 8x15 so the perimeter is long), lowering the water to get some room to work, patch leak, start over. At what point should I give up and replace the liner? I'm wondering if starting over again with concrete would be a better long term solution. How think would I have to make the concrete on a pond this size? Can anyone recommend a pond consultant (I live in the Boston area), I could hire / talk with? Thanks. I love my pond...during the moments when I'm not fixing it :-) Brian |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
bjt wrote:
Last spring I spent a couple of months finding leaks in my liner and patching them. Each leak involved raising the water, waiting a few days for the leak to lower the level, then gentle inspecting the perimeter of the new water level to find the leak (pond is 8x15 so the perimeter is long), lowering the water to get some room to work, patch leak, start over. How far down are they? How old is the liner? At what point should I give up and replace the liner? What did you put under the liner? Around here we get old carpet from installers. Works great for protecting the liner from rocks, roots, etc. I'm wondering if starting over again with concrete would be a better long term solution. How think would I have to make the concrete on a pond this size? I'm not a big fan of concrete, especially in areas that have a deep frost. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
bjt wrote:
Last spring I spent a couple of months finding leaks in my liner and patching them. Each leak involved raising the water, waiting a few days for the leak to lower the level, then gentle inspecting the perimeter of the new water level to find the leak (pond is 8x15 so the perimeter is long), lowering the water to get some room to work, patch leak, start over. How far down are they? How old is the liner? At what point should I give up and replace the liner? What did you put under the liner? Around here we get old carpet from installers. Works great for protecting the liner from rocks, roots, etc. I'm wondering if starting over again with concrete would be a better long term solution. How think would I have to make the concrete on a pond this size? I'm not a big fan of concrete, especially in areas that have a deep frost. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The leaks seem to be concentrated in the top 18 inches or so of the liner.
The liner is about 4 years old and I had only sand under the liner. In retrospect I would have put an actual underlayment under the liner but that was 4 years ago when I was young and foolish :-) Brian "C G" wrote in message .com... bjt wrote: Last spring I spent a couple of months finding leaks in my liner and patching them. Each leak involved raising the water, waiting a few days for the leak to lower the level, then gentle inspecting the perimeter of the new water level to find the leak (pond is 8x15 so the perimeter is long), lowering the water to get some room to work, patch leak, start over. How far down are they? How old is the liner? At what point should I give up and replace the liner? What did you put under the liner? Around here we get old carpet from installers. Works great for protecting the liner from rocks, roots, etc. I'm wondering if starting over again with concrete would be a better long term solution. How think would I have to make the concrete on a pond this size? I'm not a big fan of concrete, especially in areas that have a deep frost. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The leaks seem to be concentrated in the top 18 inches or so of the liner.
The liner is about 4 years old and I had only sand under the liner. In retrospect I would have put an actual underlayment under the liner but that was 4 years ago when I was young and foolish :-) Brian "C G" wrote in message .com... bjt wrote: Last spring I spent a couple of months finding leaks in my liner and patching them. Each leak involved raising the water, waiting a few days for the leak to lower the level, then gentle inspecting the perimeter of the new water level to find the leak (pond is 8x15 so the perimeter is long), lowering the water to get some room to work, patch leak, start over. How far down are they? How old is the liner? At what point should I give up and replace the liner? What did you put under the liner? Around here we get old carpet from installers. Works great for protecting the liner from rocks, roots, etc. I'm wondering if starting over again with concrete would be a better long term solution. How think would I have to make the concrete on a pond this size? I'm not a big fan of concrete, especially in areas that have a deep frost. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"bjt" wrote in message ...
The leaks seem to be concentrated in the top 18 inches or so of the liner. The liner is about 4 years old and I had only sand under the liner. In retrospect I would have put an actual underlayment under the liner but that was 4 years ago when I was young and foolish :-) Brian "C G" wrote in message .com... bjt wrote: Last spring I spent a couple of months finding leaks in my liner and patching them. Each leak involved raising the water, waiting a few days for the leak to lower the level, then gentle inspecting the perimeter of the new water level to find the leak (pond is 8x15 so the perimeter is long), lowering the water to get some room to work, patch leak, start over. How far down are they? How old is the liner? At what point should I give up and replace the liner? What did you put under the liner? Around here we get old carpet from installers. Works great for protecting the liner from rocks, roots, etc. I'm wondering if starting over again with concrete would be a better long term solution. How think would I have to make the concrete on a pond this size? I'm not a big fan of concrete, especially in areas that have a deep frost. It sounds like your have a PVC liner like I had at the start. Any place the sun hit it after four years has grown dry and brittle. Invest in a pond grade-EPDM 45 ml liner. I purchased mine at Water Garden Creations with no shipping, at a good price and delivered to the door. Happy water gardening. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"bjt" wrote in message ...
The leaks seem to be concentrated in the top 18 inches or so of the liner. The liner is about 4 years old and I had only sand under the liner. In retrospect I would have put an actual underlayment under the liner but that was 4 years ago when I was young and foolish :-) Brian "C G" wrote in message .com... bjt wrote: Last spring I spent a couple of months finding leaks in my liner and patching them. Each leak involved raising the water, waiting a few days for the leak to lower the level, then gentle inspecting the perimeter of the new water level to find the leak (pond is 8x15 so the perimeter is long), lowering the water to get some room to work, patch leak, start over. How far down are they? How old is the liner? At what point should I give up and replace the liner? What did you put under the liner? Around here we get old carpet from installers. Works great for protecting the liner from rocks, roots, etc. I'm wondering if starting over again with concrete would be a better long term solution. How think would I have to make the concrete on a pond this size? I'm not a big fan of concrete, especially in areas that have a deep frost. It sounds like your have a PVC liner like I had at the start. Any place the sun hit it after four years has grown dry and brittle. Invest in a pond grade-EPDM 45 ml liner. I purchased mine at Water Garden Creations with no shipping, at a good price and delivered to the door. Happy water gardening. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
You may be right. On the other hand the effort involved in draining and
relining an 8' x 15' x 5' pond is a bit daunting. Brian "Barbara2245" wrote in message om... "bjt" wrote in message ... The leaks seem to be concentrated in the top 18 inches or so of the liner. The liner is about 4 years old and I had only sand under the liner. In retrospect I would have put an actual underlayment under the liner but that was 4 years ago when I was young and foolish :-) Brian "C G" wrote in message .com... bjt wrote: Last spring I spent a couple of months finding leaks in my liner and patching them. Each leak involved raising the water, waiting a few days for the leak to lower the level, then gentle inspecting the perimeter of the new water level to find the leak (pond is 8x15 so the perimeter is long), lowering the water to get some room to work, patch leak, start over. How far down are they? How old is the liner? At what point should I give up and replace the liner? What did you put under the liner? Around here we get old carpet from installers. Works great for protecting the liner from rocks, roots, etc. I'm wondering if starting over again with concrete would be a better long term solution. How think would I have to make the concrete on a pond this size? I'm not a big fan of concrete, especially in areas that have a deep frost. It sounds like your have a PVC liner like I had at the start. Any place the sun hit it after four years has grown dry and brittle. Invest in a pond grade-EPDM 45 ml liner. I purchased mine at Water Garden Creations with no shipping, at a good price and delivered to the door. Happy water gardening. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
You may be right. On the other hand the effort involved in draining and
relining an 8' x 15' x 5' pond is a bit daunting. Brian "Barbara2245" wrote in message om... "bjt" wrote in message ... The leaks seem to be concentrated in the top 18 inches or so of the liner. The liner is about 4 years old and I had only sand under the liner. In retrospect I would have put an actual underlayment under the liner but that was 4 years ago when I was young and foolish :-) Brian "C G" wrote in message .com... bjt wrote: Last spring I spent a couple of months finding leaks in my liner and patching them. Each leak involved raising the water, waiting a few days for the leak to lower the level, then gentle inspecting the perimeter of the new water level to find the leak (pond is 8x15 so the perimeter is long), lowering the water to get some room to work, patch leak, start over. How far down are they? How old is the liner? At what point should I give up and replace the liner? What did you put under the liner? Around here we get old carpet from installers. Works great for protecting the liner from rocks, roots, etc. I'm wondering if starting over again with concrete would be a better long term solution. How think would I have to make the concrete on a pond this size? I'm not a big fan of concrete, especially in areas that have a deep frost. It sounds like your have a PVC liner like I had at the start. Any place the sun hit it after four years has grown dry and brittle. Invest in a pond grade-EPDM 45 ml liner. I purchased mine at Water Garden Creations with no shipping, at a good price and delivered to the door. Happy water gardening. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Wow, the prices at Water Garden Creations are very low. I'm thinking I got
pretty taken when I bought my original liner. I paid about $700 for a 15 x 20 liner 3 years ago. At the WGC prices I'm tempted to go for the 60 mil liner and be extra sure (and to get an underlayment too!). Thank you. Brian "Barbara2245" wrote in message om... "bjt" wrote in message ... The leaks seem to be concentrated in the top 18 inches or so of the liner. The liner is about 4 years old and I had only sand under the liner. In retrospect I would have put an actual underlayment under the liner but that was 4 years ago when I was young and foolish :-) Brian "C G" wrote in message .com... bjt wrote: Last spring I spent a couple of months finding leaks in my liner and patching them. Each leak involved raising the water, waiting a few days for the leak to lower the level, then gentle inspecting the perimeter of the new water level to find the leak (pond is 8x15 so the perimeter is long), lowering the water to get some room to work, patch leak, start over. How far down are they? How old is the liner? At what point should I give up and replace the liner? What did you put under the liner? Around here we get old carpet from installers. Works great for protecting the liner from rocks, roots, etc. I'm wondering if starting over again with concrete would be a better long term solution. How think would I have to make the concrete on a pond this size? I'm not a big fan of concrete, especially in areas that have a deep frost. It sounds like your have a PVC liner like I had at the start. Any place the sun hit it after four years has grown dry and brittle. Invest in a pond grade-EPDM 45 ml liner. I purchased mine at Water Garden Creations with no shipping, at a good price and delivered to the door. Happy water gardening. |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Replacing PVC Liner (questions) | Amanda Galiano | General | 4 | September 2nd 03 08:44 PM |
Pond Guard vs roofing liner - Firestone's answer! | Phyllis and Jim Hurley | General | 23 | September 2nd 03 03:50 AM |
Floating liner | RichToyBox | General | 1 | August 12th 03 02:45 AM |
New Liner Over Old? | Bonnie Espenshade | General | 2 | July 12th 03 03:50 AM |