First post here. I've seen lots of great info on this site as a long time reader and now I have a question. To make a long story short, we had the coping elevated in our pool and the plan is to get diamond Brite
The problem is that 8 years ago, we made the mistake of using epoxy pool paint on the entire pool. After doing my research, I've seen the general method is to either sandblast or chip out the plaster at this point.
The guy we went with is basically subcontracting people to do the work and he put in the contract that there would be surface demolition due to the paint. So today, he sent a guy out here who used a chipping hammer to make little quarter-sized chips in the plaster every few inches apart. In the attached pictures are his definition of surface demolition. Guy told me that you only chip out when there's several layers of plaster and the fact that the little holes he made are so close to each other will help give a good bond after they use Bond Kote.
In addition, the other day, the tile guys were putting mortar right over the dirty, painted steps. I just let them do it and ended up ripping it off and grinding the area with a diamond wheel, then I put the tile back, but I think it's going to have to come off again since it's bonded to the plaster. So that's another thing he was wrong about and assured me it's how it's done.
Im at a loss here with this guy but he was the only person who'd even give an estimate, but I'm starting to regret using him for the job. He did a great job on my neighbor's pool but it was only a plaster with bond Kote. If it's possible, I can chip it out myself to save the money and the pool guy is going to refuse it anyway. Any advice is appreciated. Obviously his method is completely wrong, right?
Thanks,
Brandon
The problem is that 8 years ago, we made the mistake of using epoxy pool paint on the entire pool. After doing my research, I've seen the general method is to either sandblast or chip out the plaster at this point.
The guy we went with is basically subcontracting people to do the work and he put in the contract that there would be surface demolition due to the paint. So today, he sent a guy out here who used a chipping hammer to make little quarter-sized chips in the plaster every few inches apart. In the attached pictures are his definition of surface demolition. Guy told me that you only chip out when there's several layers of plaster and the fact that the little holes he made are so close to each other will help give a good bond after they use Bond Kote.
In addition, the other day, the tile guys were putting mortar right over the dirty, painted steps. I just let them do it and ended up ripping it off and grinding the area with a diamond wheel, then I put the tile back, but I think it's going to have to come off again since it's bonded to the plaster. So that's another thing he was wrong about and assured me it's how it's done.
Im at a loss here with this guy but he was the only person who'd even give an estimate, but I'm starting to regret using him for the job. He did a great job on my neighbor's pool but it was only a plaster with bond Kote. If it's possible, I can chip it out myself to save the money and the pool guy is going to refuse it anyway. Any advice is appreciated. Obviously his method is completely wrong, right?
Thanks,
Brandon