Subjective question seeing as you don't know me 
So we moved into this rental property which has a pool. However, the pump fails to prime maybe 1 in 10 times. Today a repair guy came out and pointed out several leaks, plus the pump was very old and rusted. Cost to replumb only was $400; cost to replumb with a new pump $1400. Landlady predictably balked at the cost. This is to chop the pipes from the skimmer and drain before they go into the diverter (?) valve, and chop between the pump and the filter (the rest of the plumbing is newer). In total probably only 10' of pipe, though with new valves, connectors, gaskets, and a handful of 90degree and 45degree bends. This is just the above-ground kit in the immediate vicinity of the pump.
I see on pool supply websites new pumps run from $305 upwards without looking too hard. Plumbing I would hazard a guess at under $100. Valves/connectors etc maybe another $100?
Now, for comparison as to whether I could do it, I have previously plumbed in several hundred feet of irrigation (PVC pipe, connectors, sprinklers, valves; primer and cement/solvent). Is pool plumbing much the same thing, albeit somewhat larger? I'm aware there is plenty of information here on the how.
In case you're thinking the landlady should just cough up, I'm not that bothered - I can understand why she's balking at the cost, and I really don't mind helping out if it helps keep the relationship pleasant.
Thanks.
So we moved into this rental property which has a pool. However, the pump fails to prime maybe 1 in 10 times. Today a repair guy came out and pointed out several leaks, plus the pump was very old and rusted. Cost to replumb only was $400; cost to replumb with a new pump $1400. Landlady predictably balked at the cost. This is to chop the pipes from the skimmer and drain before they go into the diverter (?) valve, and chop between the pump and the filter (the rest of the plumbing is newer). In total probably only 10' of pipe, though with new valves, connectors, gaskets, and a handful of 90degree and 45degree bends. This is just the above-ground kit in the immediate vicinity of the pump.
I see on pool supply websites new pumps run from $305 upwards without looking too hard. Plumbing I would hazard a guess at under $100. Valves/connectors etc maybe another $100?
Now, for comparison as to whether I could do it, I have previously plumbed in several hundred feet of irrigation (PVC pipe, connectors, sprinklers, valves; primer and cement/solvent). Is pool plumbing much the same thing, albeit somewhat larger? I'm aware there is plenty of information here on the how.
In case you're thinking the landlady should just cough up, I'm not that bothered - I can understand why she's balking at the cost, and I really don't mind helping out if it helps keep the relationship pleasant.
Thanks.