phonedave
Well-known member
- May 30, 2012
- 2,234
- Pool Size
- 17000
- Surface
- Vinyl
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Hayward Turbo Cell (T-CELL-5)
No matter what you do get that steel wall back in shape it is going to remain compromised.
Speaking generally, when you introduce stresses into metals (such as by bending them) you are changing their crystalline structure. Bending it back does not put the crystalline structure back to how it was. The material changes - becomes less ductile and more brittle (but harder too).
The areas around the return and especially the skimmer are problem areas to. Anywhere you have a sharp corner cut in the steel, you have a stress riser. Internal stresses are higher around sharp corners.
That sharp crease right below the skimmer is especially worrisome. I would not be surprised if it spilt when you try to bend it back.
You *might* be able to patch in a new section, if you can find one. You would need to flatten the damage, and then bolt in a piece that covers all of the damaged area, using the correct bolts, reinforcement plates, and bolting pattern.. With such a new pool, I would see how much a new wall costs. Either way (patch or new) you are going to need a new liner since you have to remove the old one to work on the wall.
Speaking generally, when you introduce stresses into metals (such as by bending them) you are changing their crystalline structure. Bending it back does not put the crystalline structure back to how it was. The material changes - becomes less ductile and more brittle (but harder too).
The areas around the return and especially the skimmer are problem areas to. Anywhere you have a sharp corner cut in the steel, you have a stress riser. Internal stresses are higher around sharp corners.
That sharp crease right below the skimmer is especially worrisome. I would not be surprised if it spilt when you try to bend it back.
You *might* be able to patch in a new section, if you can find one. You would need to flatten the damage, and then bolt in a piece that covers all of the damaged area, using the correct bolts, reinforcement plates, and bolting pattern.. With such a new pool, I would see how much a new wall costs. Either way (patch or new) you are going to need a new liner since you have to remove the old one to work on the wall.