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Is It Better to Drain a Pool or Clean It?

One of the biggest questions you’ll face when your pool looks a little worse for wear is whether it’s better to drain the pool or clean it. Separation is a good option for small devices and a significant option for complex devices regulating pool water quality. Still, the right choice will depend on the problem mark and available pool maintenance equipment. In this post, we’ll look at the difference between draining and cleaning a pool and how a robot pool cleaner can help make pool maintenance more straightforward and efficient.

What Does It Take to Drain a Pool?

Draining a pool means removing all the water, a lengthy and costly process. This is usually ONLY done when something is seriously wrong with the pool, such as extreme algae buildup, unbalanced chemicals, or a severe staining issue that cannot be resolved with a simple cleaning.

Benefits of Draining a Pool:

  • Deep Cleaning: When a pool is drained, its surfaces — the walls, the floor, etc. — can be scrubbed well. This is also the best solution for stubborn stains or algae trouble.
  • Restorative Cleaning: Mineral deposits and scaling can negatively impact pool surfaces, and draining your pool allows you to acid wash it to clean the surface and preserve the pool structure.
  • Chemical Imbalance: In certain cases, if the pool water is heavily contaminated and treatments cannot balance the chemicals, pool draining and a refill with freshwater are necessary.

What’s Not So Great About Draining a Pool:

  • Expense: Emptying a pool comes at a cost, as specialized equipment is needed to drain and refill it.
  • Labor-Intensive: This process can take hours or days, depending on the pool size.
  • Risk of Damage: An improperly drained pool can be at risk of structural damage —particularly for inground pools — from pressure imbalance.
  • Pool Cleaning: The Simple Way!

Many pool owners would find cleaning the pool a more realistic and reasonable solution. Many methods can be used to clean a pool, from manual scrubbing to advanced technology such as robotic pool cleaners.

Can Push You to Clean Your Pool:

  • Way Cheaper: A robot pool cleaner, like Beatbot AquaSense 2 Pro or Maytronics pool cleaner, is often much less expensive than draining your pool. Most pool cleaning robots clean debris, dirt, and algae and can keep the pool water.
  • Time-efficient: Using a pool vacuum robot or wall-climbing pool cleaner, pool cleaning can be done in hardly the time it takes to drain and refill it.
  • Regular Maintenance: A swimming pool robot cleaner can free up your time by ensuring routine cleaning. Once you have this device, the need for frequent rinses or draining in the future is reduced.

Pros and Cons of Cleaning a Pool:

Algae and Tough Stains: If your pool has a roaring case of algae or some tough stains, cleaning may not be up to the task, and draining may be necessary to eliminate the problem.

Chemical Imbalance: When the water is very contaminated, cleaning the pool may not correct the chemical imbalance, so extra treatments may also be needed.

The pool pump can be a significant expense depending on the pool at your premises and the type of robot pool cleaner you invest in.

Employing a robot pool cleaner saves your pool from being drained and deep cleaned. These devices work similarly to a vacuum cleaner, meaning they’re able to suck up debris, dirt, and algae and also scrub the walls and floor of the pool, making them one of the most efficient ways of ensuring your water is clean.

For algae, a pool vacuum or pool vacuum robot can help clear the issue before it becomes a bigger problem. Most pool cleaning robots come with a highly effective suction system that can clear the water of microscopic debris and dust, eliminating the frequent need for draining.

Popular robot pool cleaner models such as the Beatbot AquaSense 2 and Maytronics pool cleaner are outfitted with advanced filtration systems and different cleaning modes to make caring for your pool even more convenient. These robots are suitable for debris that a manual vacuum or a pool vacuum robot would also be used for.

The Drain your Pool!!!!

Although cleaning your pool is usually the right choice, there are times when emptying the pool is unavoidable. Draining is probably the only option for your pool restoration if all the algae in your pool cannot be cleaned out or if the chemical balance is at such a level that the pool cleaning process will not improve its condition. Indirectly, you’ll need to drain the pool if you plan to do an acid wash or  deal with scaling or mineral deposits.

However, for most pool owners, routine use of a robot pool cleaner and good chemical balance will avoid the need to drain.

Conclusion: Clean, Don’t Drain

Most of your pool maintenance needs will depend on whether you use a robot pool cleaner to make the job easier and cheaper. Some innovative devices to consider are the Beatbot AquaSense 2 Pro, Beatbot AquaSense 2, and Maytronics pool cleaner, all of which will clean the pool without you having to drain it! These can handle debris, algae, and dirt, leaving your pool in high shape and lessening the need for expensive and time-consuming drainings.

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