Hi all,
I bought a house last year and was told by the pool inspector that our rim was rusting and needed to be sanded and painted (estimated $250 for this as he said it would just be a bit of labor). We hired them to replace the liner and sand the coping in the Spring. Long story short, only the liner was put in and we've moved on from them.
I'm a bit concerned about what this rusting will do to our coping. I was told it would be $10k+ to replace. I'm only planning to live in this house for ~7 years and one of my fears is needing to have this repair done in order to sell the house. We were told by the inspector that sanding and painting would prevent us from needing to replace. We decided to get another company involved for this minor repair (and other repairs) and they came out to inspect. According to them, the rust is cosmetic. We can sand and paint it, but we're just "bandaging" it. I didn't ask at the time, but I'd imagine that sanding and painting would, at the very least, be better than nothing in terms of longevity of the coping. Eventually, the rust will cause the coping to fail? We're hoping to delay that as long as possible so that we can move out of the house and not have a repair request on this for 10k+. Fortunately, the rest of the coping is not rusted. There's only a 10ft section that is rusting and it's only really bad near the skimmer.
Lastly, I have to do this repair myself. How can I do this? Unfortunately, with the liner in, there will be parts that I can't get. Especially within the liner track. My plan was to put some plastic down in the water to catch debris, and also have someone ready to scoop out anything that might fall in with a fine scooper. I was planning to put painters tape on the liner and use a sanding block (not sure on the grit) to sand it down to the metal. Then use appliance paint (recommend by one company). Should I spray rust converter as well? For the parts I can't reach with the sanding block (mostly inside the liner track), I was planning to carefully scrap the large chunks off with a flat head screwdriver.
To quickly sum this up, I'm curious how I can go about fixing or patching this rusting problem. Also, is this a manageable problem, or are we inevitably going to need a replacement in the near future.
A few quick details about the pool: 15x30 inground oval vinyl pool with original coping built in 1977.

Note: The liner was tucked in behind the skimmer faceplate because of rusting in the track I presume. I also replaced that nasty weir door since the picture.
Thanks!
I bought a house last year and was told by the pool inspector that our rim was rusting and needed to be sanded and painted (estimated $250 for this as he said it would just be a bit of labor). We hired them to replace the liner and sand the coping in the Spring. Long story short, only the liner was put in and we've moved on from them.
I'm a bit concerned about what this rusting will do to our coping. I was told it would be $10k+ to replace. I'm only planning to live in this house for ~7 years and one of my fears is needing to have this repair done in order to sell the house. We were told by the inspector that sanding and painting would prevent us from needing to replace. We decided to get another company involved for this minor repair (and other repairs) and they came out to inspect. According to them, the rust is cosmetic. We can sand and paint it, but we're just "bandaging" it. I didn't ask at the time, but I'd imagine that sanding and painting would, at the very least, be better than nothing in terms of longevity of the coping. Eventually, the rust will cause the coping to fail? We're hoping to delay that as long as possible so that we can move out of the house and not have a repair request on this for 10k+. Fortunately, the rest of the coping is not rusted. There's only a 10ft section that is rusting and it's only really bad near the skimmer.
Lastly, I have to do this repair myself. How can I do this? Unfortunately, with the liner in, there will be parts that I can't get. Especially within the liner track. My plan was to put some plastic down in the water to catch debris, and also have someone ready to scoop out anything that might fall in with a fine scooper. I was planning to put painters tape on the liner and use a sanding block (not sure on the grit) to sand it down to the metal. Then use appliance paint (recommend by one company). Should I spray rust converter as well? For the parts I can't reach with the sanding block (mostly inside the liner track), I was planning to carefully scrap the large chunks off with a flat head screwdriver.
To quickly sum this up, I'm curious how I can go about fixing or patching this rusting problem. Also, is this a manageable problem, or are we inevitably going to need a replacement in the near future.
A few quick details about the pool: 15x30 inground oval vinyl pool with original coping built in 1977.

Note: The liner was tucked in behind the skimmer faceplate because of rusting in the track I presume. I also replaced that nasty weir door since the picture.
Thanks!