I've embarked on the project of a lifetime... self-installing a fiberglass pool for my family (wife and 2 kids under 3 yrs old) here in southern Indiana. I spent countless hours researching different types, shapes, and manufacturers of all kinds of pools and settled on a 16x40 Aspen by Thursday Pools. I found a dealer that would order the shell for me without doing the whole install and made the 50% deposit to get the order going.
I then researched, selected, and purchased all of our equipment - mostly Hayward, plus a Circupool SWG. Then I began electrical work: a 50A subpanel at the back corner of the house, a 2-sided control panel for my equipment pad (subpanel on one side, and equipment controllers on the other), lots of conduit for receptacles, pool lights, switches, autocover, and autocover touchpad. As well as a 50ft gas line for the NG heater.
Right about as I finished up the electrical work, I got the call scheduling the pool delivery (about 2 weeks earlier than expected!)
I decided to get the equipment pad poured and have all the equipment set (and wired) prior to the pool arrival so I could get it hooked up and running quickly.
Then, a friend came over on a Saturday to help out with the excavation (pool to be delivered the following wednesday). Excavation went really well and took about 4 hrs:


All was well until Tuesday brought a MASSIVE thunderstorm. My yard gets quite a bit of runoff from the neighbors on each side, so my swimming pool excavation quickly became a pond:

I left work and rented a trash pump to pump it out and spent the whole afternoon/evening shoveling mud out of the hole and re-screeding the gravel base.
Finally, Wednesday came around and the pool arrived precisely on schedule!


A little rigging and planning, and we had the pool in the air, over the truck, around the house, and in the hole.


Spent about an hr checking, double checking, and triple checking for level - the whole shell was within 1/2" right off the bat! I took this opportunity to install the bubblers I had planned for the tanning ledge (since I could get under there easily. I just used CMP fiberglass return fittings and plumbed them out to the edge of the pool where I teed them together. Then...time for water and backfill (I used #11 crushed stone on the base, and #8's for the backfill). A couple trucks of water and 3 garden hoses got us to about 15" below the top lip by the end of the day.


Then I spent about two full days installing 3 returns , 5 lights, and the skimmer, and plumbing them all to one corner of the pool, where they would then extend up to the equipment pad. At the end of day 2 of plumbing/wiring, I gave the lights a try
:

I then researched, selected, and purchased all of our equipment - mostly Hayward, plus a Circupool SWG. Then I began electrical work: a 50A subpanel at the back corner of the house, a 2-sided control panel for my equipment pad (subpanel on one side, and equipment controllers on the other), lots of conduit for receptacles, pool lights, switches, autocover, and autocover touchpad. As well as a 50ft gas line for the NG heater.
Right about as I finished up the electrical work, I got the call scheduling the pool delivery (about 2 weeks earlier than expected!)
I decided to get the equipment pad poured and have all the equipment set (and wired) prior to the pool arrival so I could get it hooked up and running quickly.
Then, a friend came over on a Saturday to help out with the excavation (pool to be delivered the following wednesday). Excavation went really well and took about 4 hrs:


All was well until Tuesday brought a MASSIVE thunderstorm. My yard gets quite a bit of runoff from the neighbors on each side, so my swimming pool excavation quickly became a pond:

I left work and rented a trash pump to pump it out and spent the whole afternoon/evening shoveling mud out of the hole and re-screeding the gravel base.
Finally, Wednesday came around and the pool arrived precisely on schedule!


A little rigging and planning, and we had the pool in the air, over the truck, around the house, and in the hole.


Spent about an hr checking, double checking, and triple checking for level - the whole shell was within 1/2" right off the bat! I took this opportunity to install the bubblers I had planned for the tanning ledge (since I could get under there easily. I just used CMP fiberglass return fittings and plumbed them out to the edge of the pool where I teed them together. Then...time for water and backfill (I used #11 crushed stone on the base, and #8's for the backfill). A couple trucks of water and 3 garden hoses got us to about 15" below the top lip by the end of the day.


Then I spent about two full days installing 3 returns , 5 lights, and the skimmer, and plumbing them all to one corner of the pool, where they would then extend up to the equipment pad. At the end of day 2 of plumbing/wiring, I gave the lights a try
