WOW!!!!! you take ALL them boards off every year?!?!?
WOW!!!!! you take ALL them boards off every year?!?!?
Boyd
27' Round AG, 17,204 gallons, sand filter
&
Proud Father of an Army Soldier
No, not all of them. Just the five or six 2x4s that are laying flat along the top rail under the decking boards. If you look at the top of the picture, you can see a few of them under the decking boards. It takes a cordless drill and about 5 minutes to take the screws out and then we're done.
In addition to needing room for a cover also consider these factors:
Replacing A Liner: Your top rails will need to removed so that you can change your liner.
Replacing Your Pool: Say 10 years down the line you replace your pool. If you built it to fit a 48" pool, then a 52" or 54" pool won't work with your old deck.
Josh
I do not like the idea of pressure-treated as a pool deck. I know there have been some discussions about this, but pressure-treating is a process in which highly toxic chemicals are forced into the wood--arsenic, I believe.
Now you are going to expose it to a lot of water (which is OK), which will leech some of those chemicals out--and much if it will run back into your pool.![]()
I strongly suggest you use another material (that synthetic plastic decking that looks like wood may be a good alternative) or build your deck so it's lower than the pool and run-off from the deck doesn't go into the pool. Another good alternative decking is cedar--it's naturally weather-resistant.
That's my advice--never use P/T where it's above the edge of the pool. Others will vehemently disagree with me--That's their choice.
Carl
I think they eliminated arsenic in PT now, I heard that on the news within the last couple of years. How about Trex?
Trex is a great alternative, stick with the lighter colors though (heat).
Wolmanized no longer has the arsenic and other poisons in it, but it's a maintenance nightmare, especially with chlorine nearby - matter of fact, anything wood will be a nightmare, cedar will give you nice fine splinters in your feet with time, don't ever pressure wash it since you will actually ruin it's resistance to the elements.
Another problem with cedar is that 90% of it no longer contains the resins that used to let it last so long, the problem there is that cedar does not develop the resin until the tree is approximately 50 years old, logging companies don't wait for trees to get 50 years old anymore and thus most cedar available today is worse than wolmanized when it comes to standing up to the elements.
In my opinion, wolmanized substructure with Trex decking and trim is the way to go, for railings, there are many nice aluminum systems readily available that are not nearly as bulky as your typical wood railing.
Wood is longer treated with chromated copper chromium arsenate. It's now treated with a copper based preservative without the arsenic (some of the new preservatives actually contain polyquat or something very like it). If it's pitched away from the pool as it should be, I would think a minimal amount of the preservative could be leached into the pool water.
If you regularly treated it with a water repellent sealer that would probably further minimize the leaching.
Plastic wood is very slippery when wet.