Pool surround cleaning is typically chosen for cleanliness, hygiene and pool plant compatibility — with slip resistance an afterthought or absent consideration. But cleaning chemistry directly affects in-service PTV — sometimes by tens of points either way. This guide covers the cleaning-PTV interaction specific to pool environments and what to look for when reviewing the cleaning regime.
Several mechanisms operate, some pool-specific:
Products designed for pool surround maintenance typically:
Several major UK pool cleaning suppliers publish slip-resistance compatibility data; this should be referenced when product selection is reviewed.
One of the most reliable findings in pool periodic testing is a surround that meets specification immediately after a deep clean but progressively underperforms several days into the cleaning cycle as polishing-style products accumulate. The post-clean PTV is not the PTV that pool users actually walk on. Testing toward the end of the cleaning cycle — not immediately after — captures in-service performance.
In claim-defence work, capturing pendulum data both immediately post-clean and toward the end of the cycle is sometimes useful to demonstrate the operational variability the regime produces.
Pool surrounds in hard-water areas accumulate calcium scale at the splash zone and adjacent areas. Routine descaling regimes prevent scale build-up but, if too aggressive, can swing the surface chemistry the other way. Periodic Rz testing identifies whether the descaling regime is in balance — gradual Rz reduction year-on-year suggests over-descaling and incremental glaze loss.
Where pendulum testing identifies in-service PTV below specification on a pool surround, the cleaning regime is one of the first investigation paths. A typical intervention sequence:
This produces both the operational improvement and the documentary record that the operator identified and addressed the issue.
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