I think if you saw how well a bead blast turns out,
I think you would change your mind.
It's been awhile since I came back to check responses. Had some family issues that needed attention. Anyhow, I thank those for responses, but it seems like several folks didn't get that I have a Fiberglass pool. I do not have Tile at the waterline. I know the glass bead process and have done it myself on automotive parts. But, it will still be abrasive enough on the fiberglass as to cause it to lose it's gloss.
I am in Central Arizona, midway between Phoenix and Tucson. My waterline buildup is mostly my fault for not staying on top of it. I have tried several commercial products that don't even come close to removing the buildup. The build up is comprised of Calcium mainly. Muriatic Acid seems to be the most suggested cleaner except I have not been able to find Muriatic acid in a strong enough form for it to do anything. Muriatic Acid available to the public has been diluted so much that it now takes hours to get the calcium out of my chlorine generator when I clean it. A couple years ago I could clean my Chlorine Generator in 20-30 minutes with a 50/50 solution.
I'm going to try and find some stronger Muriatic acid. But, I have heard of a Soda blasting process that uses Sodium Bicarbonate.
Anybody have any cleaning suggestions, I'd be glad to try them. But, they have to be friendly to fiberglass surfaces.
Thanks in advance.......
Chuck in Arizona City, AZ
Your pool is fiberglass but the waterline tile is ceramic, right? Though I'm not familiar with the glass bead blasting process referenced by Pool Clown, maybe he can tell you if it's appropriate for fiberglass pools. I would think they could mask off the area around the tile before application.
Since calcium gets harder the longer it's allowed to stay, preventive action makes the most sense:
1) Keep pool water balanced, out of the scaling (high) end;
2) Reduce calcium to the extent possible via draining (if the fill water doesn't contain too much calcium) or by the filtering / reverse osmosis process that I believe is available in your area;
3) Stop calcium additions by avoiding use of cal-hypo chlorine tablets/shock powder; instead, rely on liquid chlorine, bleach, a SWG or... if necessary, tri-chlor (but watch out for excessive CYA build-up);
4) Attack newly built-up areas with Magic eraser or similar product as soon as you notice calcium accumulation... do it piecemeal, a few minutes a day, over several days or weeks during swim season and the process will seem less laborious.
The Pool is a San Juan Fiberglass pool It is entirely fiberglass, all the way to the decking. I actually live about 4 miles from the San Juan Factory in Eloy, Arizona. I have found a product at a Pool store that is supposed to be very good at getting rid of this Calcium waterline deposit.
The ingredients of the product I found is Hydrochloric and Hydroflouric acid. The person at the store told me that it this doesn't do it, it will take blasting and possibly refinishing.
Hard water and Calcium are big time problems in our area here.
In Arizona, we also have the problem of the Sun baking the heck out of it , which makes it alittle harder to get off.
I'll post what happens and what i finally get to work...........if anything.
Oh! I do, and have been draining my pool 1/2 way each year and refilling.