Cantilever 4×4 edge
- By mark1314
- Under Construction
- 1 Replies
I have a 4in cantilever edge and 6in under that, can you cut out the 6in without replacing the shell?
MAPR-Austin; Thank you for sharing your expertise here!. My in-laws just got a quote from a landscape design co to tear up and re-pour the deck around their inground liner pool. My gut told me that perhaps the deck is somehow tied into the pool walls. The quote includes a lengthy paragraph absolving them of responsibility to any damage to the pool, etc. Separately, this (Spartan) pool has an old aluminum coping that has corner pieces out of place. Do you know how it likely attaches to the wall? Are they possibly integral to the liner track, or can it be taken off and replaced with new metal, or poured coping (as with the Stegmeier forms)?The decking can be demoed and replaced, but I would suggest:
-Leave the pool full of water during the work, to keep the walls from collapsing into the pool
-Do the demo work by hand, not with a skidsteer or excavator. The walls are tied into the deck by rebar that runs up the back of the walls and is then tied to the rebar in the deck.
-Put the plumbing under pressure before the demo work starts, and until the deck is fully poured.
-The right contractor can remove those white coping strips and pour the new deck with a cantilever form.
-The rebar coming up from the back of the walls MUST be retained and tied back into the new deck. It is the only thing keeping the top of the walls from
It looks like the tile is set in a track, should be straightforward to remove it and reset some new tile.
The rust looks to be from a seam in the panels. Depending on how far you want to go with this thing, you could have the paint blasted off (I would use hydroblasting or some alternative to sand blasting to minimize mess and likelihood of making holes in the walls). After that, the walls should probably be primed with some kind of rust inhibiting primer, then repainted and the seams re-caulked.
The floor can probably be prepped and replastered - nothing special needed.
On the deck, I have also seen people use L-shaped renovation pavers to cover up the deck and the white strip. Might be worth looking into.
Which new pump? Which old Pentair pump? All pump manufacturers use proprietary threads on the pump, they are not interchangeable.Yeah, Pentair has its own weird (wider-spaced) threading. Hayward may have its own, too. All the standard and generic companies seem to have the same threading, however, oddly enough (maybe it's the same as Hayward?).
But I am dealing with old Pentair unions - I went to put in my new non-Pentair pump and, lo-and-behold, the unions won't screw onto it. I looked like heck for an adapter to screw onto the pump (I found a discontinued one that is the opposite of my situation - ie, if someone had a new Pentair pump and the existing unions didn't fit.).
I'm looking at split-nut unions, though it's hard to tell if they're quite right. I also have the union slip plumbed directly into my 3-way valve so, like you, I'm leery to go a-heat gunning. It's exasperating to be stymied by a lousy union.