- Aug 9, 2017
- 156
- Pool Size
- 12000
- Surface
- Plaster
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair Intellichlor IC-40
Not what I want to hear JamesW but what I expect based on everything else I've read. I don't see any meaningful recourse though...until it fails it's just dissatisfaction re: a sloppy job, right?
The PB offered to fix the missing bench area without prompting from me and he didn't try to charge for it either. I think he tries to do "the right thing" so I'm not really surprised...but clearly he's not using the best crews. I also think he's too friendly with his crews and not really representing my interests/pushing them to do better work.
He didn't respond to my report re: the area of the wall that got thin and has exposed rebar. I brought it back up with him and he said he'd have the crew to "patch it" and if they can't, "it will be fixed at brown coat time" and he mentioned according to the engineering the wall was only 6" (it is about 9 in that thin area and more like 11 everywhere else). It looks to me like they just didn't have a spacer in that corner so the backer board ended up going straight up against the rebar. Guess I have to read up on the process of shooting on top of existing material -- I don't like the idea that tile/plaster guys are going to "fix it" -- I assume there is a reason that rebar is supposed to be encapsulated in a couple inches of concrete so I'll try to get them to do that.
Soooooo wish I had done an owner-build and been able to hire my own crews...
The PB offered to fix the missing bench area without prompting from me and he didn't try to charge for it either. I think he tries to do "the right thing" so I'm not really surprised...but clearly he's not using the best crews. I also think he's too friendly with his crews and not really representing my interests/pushing them to do better work.
He didn't respond to my report re: the area of the wall that got thin and has exposed rebar. I brought it back up with him and he said he'd have the crew to "patch it" and if they can't, "it will be fixed at brown coat time" and he mentioned according to the engineering the wall was only 6" (it is about 9 in that thin area and more like 11 everywhere else). It looks to me like they just didn't have a spacer in that corner so the backer board ended up going straight up against the rebar. Guess I have to read up on the process of shooting on top of existing material -- I don't like the idea that tile/plaster guys are going to "fix it" -- I assume there is a reason that rebar is supposed to be encapsulated in a couple inches of concrete so I'll try to get them to do that.
Soooooo wish I had done an owner-build and been able to hire my own crews...