- Sep 5, 2020
- 12
- Pool Size
- 11700
- Surface
- Fiberglass
- Chlorine
- Salt Water Generator
- SWG Type
- Pentair iChlor 30
Hi all. First time poster, long time lurker who has learned so much from all you great folks here on TFP. Thank you!
Here's our issue:
Mar 2021. Latham fiberglass pool installed in Tucson, AZ. Terrible installation.
Sep 2022. Leak in a return. PB dug it up and repaired it.
Jan 2023. Pool shell cracked (photos attached, sorry nothing there for scale); crack was 4-5 mm wide, 10 mm long, vertically offset 2-3 mm). PB dug up the entire side where the leak was, put 18 coats of fiberglass on the outside of the leak, backfilled (properly, this time). Sanded down the crack on the inside, supposedly did a fiberglass repair, but I think all he actually did was apply some gel coat to try to make it look good. A few days after he left and the pool was refilled, I swam down to the repair with goggles and saw a hairline crack had reappeared, 1mm or less wide and 8-10 mm long, vertically flush. Pool is not leaking as far as I can tell. Repair was completed in April 2023.
May 2023. We submitted a warranty claim to Latham after confirming PB never did so. With MUCH effort over several months, we got Latham to agree to repair the shell. But given this was a Latham-authorized installer, and given how nearly impossible it has been to get Latham to even talk to us, we don't know if we trust them to do the repair correctly. Also, they would require us to brace and drain the pool (which we'll have to hire out). We're wondering if the risk of making the repair is greater than leaving it alone.
Sep 2023. Found a company in Phoenix with expertise in fiberglass pool repair. They looked at the pool and, even though the crack is no longer visible (???), they thought we should let Latham do the warranty repair since they agreed to do so. This company also noted a second problem: from the installation photos I provided them, they pointed out that ABS glue (black) was used on the PVC pipe for all the plumbing. We expect that won't last much longer (right?). Quoted us $17K to dig it all up and replace all the plumbing. Also quoted $25K to fully re-glass the pool, with a 10 year warranty if we wanted to do that instead of letting Latham repair just the crack.
We are stumped on how to proceed. Any thoughts or suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you so much!
Jim & Lisa



Here's our issue:
Mar 2021. Latham fiberglass pool installed in Tucson, AZ. Terrible installation.
Sep 2022. Leak in a return. PB dug it up and repaired it.
Jan 2023. Pool shell cracked (photos attached, sorry nothing there for scale); crack was 4-5 mm wide, 10 mm long, vertically offset 2-3 mm). PB dug up the entire side where the leak was, put 18 coats of fiberglass on the outside of the leak, backfilled (properly, this time). Sanded down the crack on the inside, supposedly did a fiberglass repair, but I think all he actually did was apply some gel coat to try to make it look good. A few days after he left and the pool was refilled, I swam down to the repair with goggles and saw a hairline crack had reappeared, 1mm or less wide and 8-10 mm long, vertically flush. Pool is not leaking as far as I can tell. Repair was completed in April 2023.
May 2023. We submitted a warranty claim to Latham after confirming PB never did so. With MUCH effort over several months, we got Latham to agree to repair the shell. But given this was a Latham-authorized installer, and given how nearly impossible it has been to get Latham to even talk to us, we don't know if we trust them to do the repair correctly. Also, they would require us to brace and drain the pool (which we'll have to hire out). We're wondering if the risk of making the repair is greater than leaving it alone.
Sep 2023. Found a company in Phoenix with expertise in fiberglass pool repair. They looked at the pool and, even though the crack is no longer visible (???), they thought we should let Latham do the warranty repair since they agreed to do so. This company also noted a second problem: from the installation photos I provided them, they pointed out that ABS glue (black) was used on the PVC pipe for all the plumbing. We expect that won't last much longer (right?). Quoted us $17K to dig it all up and replace all the plumbing. Also quoted $25K to fully re-glass the pool, with a 10 year warranty if we wanted to do that instead of letting Latham repair just the crack.
We are stumped on how to proceed. Any thoughts or suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you so much!
Jim & Lisa


