Agreed. But the problem is the slide is now embedded in rock wall and can’t be taken apart without removing the stone structure. It’s pretty clear that the slide was incorrectly assembled and then the mason showed up and finished the rock slide wall. The job supervisor should have been onsite during the assembly and installation of the slide but clearly was not or was there and not competent enough to read a manual and check the assembly. So now there is a major defect in the installation and the builder wants the homeowner to accept this or they want to apply some half-a⒮⒮ed fix which will fail in a couple of years. It’s unacceptable and the builder needs to take responsibility for it.
This is the problem with this industry - pool “builders” are rarely actual tradesman but just glorified schedulers. They want to do nothing but push the paperwork (plans and permits) and schedule subs and then collect their 20%. They send their sales people in to make promises they can’t keep and then assign job foreman to your site who either sit in their trucks all day or simply drive by and never stop to check in on the work. And then when the homeowner demands something be fixed, they get blamed for being “picky” or told they are “not the expert”.
It’s maddening. And it’s not even my home/pool …
I agree with
@JamesW, call SR Smith and ask them to send out a representative to assure that the installation is correct and that they will warranty the slide and it’s installation …