hi i'm a guy and i wear tan pantyhose under my shorts every time i go swimming. they aren't really noticeable unless you're walking round the pool or showering after. the problem is if you swim fast they tend to drag in the water and you end up with a few inches of pantyhose at the end of your toes. plus i forget to pull my shorts up after a dive sometimes so they have been seen by a few other swimmers but i just ignore the comments and carry on.
Yes and the swimming pool will make it fade much faster.
The particles are too mall to be captured in pantyhose. Hayward Pool Products makes a pre-filter called a Water Bobby that attaches to a standard garden hose. It will capture the stain causing metals and minerals in your fill water.
Not unless a person had been trained properly in order to swim the longer course of a pool. it comes from experience if they are training in a longer pool they they can increase speed and make there times come down but if they are first just starting a long pool then no it will not make them go faster in fact it Will actually slow them down! it comes from experience i swim competitively and coach as well as teach swim lessons!
If by chlorine pool, you mean a pool filled with fresh water that uses chlorine (or bromine) as a sanitizer, then the question really is: Is a salt water pool faster than a fresh water pool? If by "faster", you mean ability to swim fast, then the answer is the salt water pool. A swimmer floats higher on salt water, therefore there is less water contacting less surface area on the swimmer's body, therefore, there is less resistance and a person could swim faster in a salt water pool. The salinity in a salt water pool is so minimal (maybe 1/6th to 1/12th the salinity of the ocean) the boyancy difference between a fresh water and salt water pool is minimal, if even measurable. However, swim times are measured in such small fractions of a second, the difference would be measurable in say Olympic type events, but not in your local swim club or school pool. Both answers above make good observations. I must say, though, that I disagree with the conclusion of the first. Having more surface area exposed makes for more drag, not less. Submarines are faster than surface ships and porpoises are faster under water than they are on the surface, right?
It may be wearing out.
They weren't wearing their trunks.
It depends. I usually go faster in the middle lanes than on the end lanes What will make a lane faster is depth and closeness to walls, both impacting how the waves caused by swimmers disperse and break. The deeper the pool and farther from the wall, the faster the lane. Also, temperature makes a difference. Generally, colder pool= faster. Partly cause colder is denser and thusly you have more to push against and then the psychological aspect of being cold seems to make people move quicker.
A pool with a solar cover will absorb the heat faster during the day and when left on the pool over night it will prevent the loss of heat.
The difference is not significant.
Well think about it. If you wear these huge flippers in a pool, and swim, then get out and put on baby ones, which one will make you go faster? I say it'll be the bigger the faster
A pool and a stop watch.
yes by having your own pool or wearing a shirt and shorts over it