Troubleshooting
Gallery

What the defect looks like

Use the gallery to separate surface staining from finish damage before you clean or drain.

Fiberglass Defects, Stains, and Surface Protection

Separate cosmetic staining and scale from gelcoat damage, blister concerns, and shell issues before you turn a recoverable fiberglass finish into an expensive repair.

Use this when
  • Separate cosmetic staining and scale from gelcoat damage, blister concerns, and shell issues before you turn a recoverable fiberglass finish into an expensive repair.
You'll need
  • pH
  • TA
  • CH
  • CSI
  • Salt level (if salt system)
Stop and escalate if
  • Do not default to pumice, harsh abrasives, or aggressive acid procedures on fiberglass finishes.
  • Do not assume a rough patch is just scale until finish damage has been ruled out.
  • Unauthorized draining and undocumented chemistry history can complicate defect review later.
पहले यह करें

Sort cosmetic staining from gelcoat damage before treating. A stain and a blister need different responses.

यह न करें
  • Do not default to pumice, harsh abrasives, or aggressive acid on fiberglass
  • Do not assume a rough patch is just scale until finish damage has been ruled out
  • Do not drain fiberglass as a default cleaning step
तैयार रखें

pH / TA / CH / CSI / Salt level (if salt system)

0%0/19 done
1

Sort cosmetic issues from structural or finish-system issues

Fiberglass problems are often misdiagnosed because many different defects look like 'stains' at first glance.

2

Use the least aggressive surface cleaning possible

Gelcoat and finish layers are easier to damage than to restore.

Warnings
  • Do not default to pumice, harsh abrasives, or aggressive acid procedures on fiberglass finishes.
  • Do not assume a rough patch is just scale until finish damage has been ruled out.
3

Treat blistering, texture change, and cracking as a documentation problem first

If the finish itself may be failing, photos and records matter before anyone sands, buffs, or drains.

Tips
  • A cosmetically ugly stain and a warrantable structural issue are handled very differently. Do not blur them together.
4

Protect the shell during chemistry corrections

Fiberglass still needs good balance even though it is not plaster.

5

Escalate when the finish or shell may be failing

The right time to involve the builder or shell specialist is before destructive experimentation starts.

Warnings
  • Unauthorized draining and undocumented chemistry history can complicate defect review later.
  • Do not let a contractor turn a diagnosis problem into a resurfacing job before the cause is understood.
प्रश्न? (3)

Are all fiberglass 'blisters' structural?

No. Some appearance changes are cosmetic, but owners should not assume that without documenting the issue and separating staining or scale from finish failure.

Why does fiberglass still care about water balance if it is not plaster?

Because bad balance still drives scale, corrosion, staining, equipment damage, and visible finish problems even when calcium demand is different from cementitious pools.

Should I drain fiberglass to clean it better?

Not as a default. Draining fiberglass is a high-risk decision and should be tied to builder/manufacturer procedures and groundwater conditions.

Surface Damage Boundary

Treat shell movement, delamination, and liner failures as evidence problems first and repair problems second. Document before you disturb the vessel.

OWNER-SAFE
  • Photograph the defect from wide and close angles, then note water level, recent storms, and recent refill history.
  • Keep the pool at the manual's safe level while you assess whether the issue is cosmetic or structural.
  • Collect model, finish, and install-age information before you ask for repair advice.
PRO-ONLY
  • Assess cracks, delamination, warping, major seam failure, or liner replacement decisions.
  • Drain, cut, patch, or repair anything that could change vessel support or warranty status.
  • Handle structural water-loss decisions when the shell, bead, or finish may be compromised.
STOP NOW
  • Shell movement, bulging, liner float, exposed rebar, or a defect that grows while the water level changes.
  • A crack or tear that looks like it is opening into the structure rather than staying on the surface.
  • Any sign that draining the pool could make the damage worse.

Educational guidance only. Verify labels, manuals, local code, and site conditions before acting. Stop for electrical, gas, structural, drain, drowning, injury, emergency, or chemical-mixing risk.

Terms