Good day,
I hope everyone is in good spirits, it has certainly been tough for me. I called a pool contractor to replace/enhance my 18x36 oval inground pool equipment (larger sand filter, quiet variable speed pump, and add a pool heater-I had no heater before) and relocate the equipment to a new location in the yard. I was also beginning a pool deck (patio) renovation project but I let the pool contractor work first because I thought he would be putting in new pipes straight to the returns to where the new equipment was. When he was done working, I found out that he did not replace the pipes near the returns at all and instead relied on my existing pipes and connected the minimum amount of new pipe. It looked like a cost cutting measure and I asked if it would be a problem, it would leak, since we don't know the age and condition of the old pipes, but he claimed that it was how it always was done, and it wouldn't be a problem, and we decided to trust his professional opinion. They also said there was a warranty on their labor so I thought if it leaked they would fix it(but now they are trying to limit that just to "equipment"). Anyways, my patio was put on, it was still early spring so too cold to swim or really use the pool, and it seemed to pass all the perfunctory tests (except we weren't able to see a full backwash because they never extended the backwash soft rubber lines to let the water run for a full 2 minute cycle). So, in the test, they never backwashed the pool fully. In warmer weather a few weeks later, I performed the first real backwash of the pool, and found that there was a leak under the patio, in the pipe that they did not replace. They refuse to repair the area under the patio for me and instead put a temporary long aboveground pipe and had to gall to charge me for it, almost $400.
I called other contractors who said that they would have done all new pipes from the return to the equipment, which I was expecting in the first place but found this contractor I chose cut corners.
They are instead blaming my mason for somehow messing up my pipes. I watched my mason work the entire time and if he caused the problem it would have occurred as soon as the patio was put up, not when I first backwashed my pool.
Being that they chose to connect old pipe with new pipe, should they be responsible for this leak even though it is not technically part of the scant new pipes they installed? It seems like a shortcut, a design flaw that they wanted me to take on the risk of, but they are trying to shy off responsibility of.
Now my pool is stuck with an aboveground "temporary" pipe and I have to ask another contractor to fix the leak under the patio (ripping up my newly installed patio on the way as well).
Do I have a case in court or do they actually have no responsibility like they claimed, even though it was their choice to connect old and new pipes?
Also they claimed that backwash was a coincidence. However I'm not so sure, the leak occurred after I did the first full backwash cycle with water actually running out of the pool for 2 minutes, rinsed, and then I turned the filter back to filter mode (at this time, the leak started under the patio). Could something in backwash cycle have triggered this problem? The backwash was never tested fully when they did the initial test after the installation.
Please advise. Wondering if I should sue or not. I already paid them over 8000 to do this project only to end up with a leaking pipes and have to spend more $$ to get it fixed and REDO my patio when it seems to be due to their cost cutting measure.
My pool pipes NEVER leaked for the 2 years I moved to this house. It seems like the problem occurred after they altered the pipe structure instead of putting in new pipes.
Could my old pipes not be adequate for the new larger filter and the different pumping motion of the variable speed pump? Could they have somehow accidentally broken my old pipes as they are trying to connect it with the new pipes? Does backwash have any mechanically special elements that induce leaks?
Thanks, any advise is appreciated. Not a pool expert but always trying to learn.
I hope everyone is in good spirits, it has certainly been tough for me. I called a pool contractor to replace/enhance my 18x36 oval inground pool equipment (larger sand filter, quiet variable speed pump, and add a pool heater-I had no heater before) and relocate the equipment to a new location in the yard. I was also beginning a pool deck (patio) renovation project but I let the pool contractor work first because I thought he would be putting in new pipes straight to the returns to where the new equipment was. When he was done working, I found out that he did not replace the pipes near the returns at all and instead relied on my existing pipes and connected the minimum amount of new pipe. It looked like a cost cutting measure and I asked if it would be a problem, it would leak, since we don't know the age and condition of the old pipes, but he claimed that it was how it always was done, and it wouldn't be a problem, and we decided to trust his professional opinion. They also said there was a warranty on their labor so I thought if it leaked they would fix it(but now they are trying to limit that just to "equipment"). Anyways, my patio was put on, it was still early spring so too cold to swim or really use the pool, and it seemed to pass all the perfunctory tests (except we weren't able to see a full backwash because they never extended the backwash soft rubber lines to let the water run for a full 2 minute cycle). So, in the test, they never backwashed the pool fully. In warmer weather a few weeks later, I performed the first real backwash of the pool, and found that there was a leak under the patio, in the pipe that they did not replace. They refuse to repair the area under the patio for me and instead put a temporary long aboveground pipe and had to gall to charge me for it, almost $400.
I called other contractors who said that they would have done all new pipes from the return to the equipment, which I was expecting in the first place but found this contractor I chose cut corners.
They are instead blaming my mason for somehow messing up my pipes. I watched my mason work the entire time and if he caused the problem it would have occurred as soon as the patio was put up, not when I first backwashed my pool.
Being that they chose to connect old pipe with new pipe, should they be responsible for this leak even though it is not technically part of the scant new pipes they installed? It seems like a shortcut, a design flaw that they wanted me to take on the risk of, but they are trying to shy off responsibility of.
Now my pool is stuck with an aboveground "temporary" pipe and I have to ask another contractor to fix the leak under the patio (ripping up my newly installed patio on the way as well).
Do I have a case in court or do they actually have no responsibility like they claimed, even though it was their choice to connect old and new pipes?
Also they claimed that backwash was a coincidence. However I'm not so sure, the leak occurred after I did the first full backwash cycle with water actually running out of the pool for 2 minutes, rinsed, and then I turned the filter back to filter mode (at this time, the leak started under the patio). Could something in backwash cycle have triggered this problem? The backwash was never tested fully when they did the initial test after the installation.
Please advise. Wondering if I should sue or not. I already paid them over 8000 to do this project only to end up with a leaking pipes and have to spend more $$ to get it fixed and REDO my patio when it seems to be due to their cost cutting measure.
My pool pipes NEVER leaked for the 2 years I moved to this house. It seems like the problem occurred after they altered the pipe structure instead of putting in new pipes.
Could my old pipes not be adequate for the new larger filter and the different pumping motion of the variable speed pump? Could they have somehow accidentally broken my old pipes as they are trying to connect it with the new pipes? Does backwash have any mechanically special elements that induce leaks?
Thanks, any advise is appreciated. Not a pool expert but always trying to learn.
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