Refinishing options include painting, or placing a new plaster or other cement based surface. It's unlikely you'll exactly match your top step with the rest of the pool.
Refinishing options include painting, or placing a new plaster or other cement based surface. It's unlikely you'll exactly match your top step with the rest of the pool.
You can paint just the top step or steps. There are ways to properly prep the steps without getting too much residue in the water, none of it is simple though.
Colored plaster will fade. If you currently have plaster and not paint, I would strongly urge you not to paint. We do both finishes and I always do my best to talk a client out of paint. If you do paint, don't go cheap. Find a quality 2 part epoxy paint and prep according to direction.
Greg
Marin Pool Restoration
Hi Marin
i was wondering why you recomend not to paint if there is colored plaster. you are right, it looks like in some areas there is fading and mostly in the steps. Is there any other treatment for color plaster recondition?
Plaster can last 10+ years without service. The best paint -- applied exactly per mfg directions -- won't usually last more than 5 years, till you have to recoat.
PoolDoc / Ben
In my situation it seems like maybe this pool was done a while ago. it has started to fade and there is a bit of scaling on the top step. I can also notice the faded spots here and there. Is there any recondition that i can do with out painting it?
Plaster pools are commonly acid washed to address issues like yours. Acid washing works by dissolving the top layer of plaster, and exposing a 'new' top layer underneath.
BUT . . . acid washing does not evenly dissolve that top layer, and the resulting plaster is rougher and more susceptible to stains, than the original surface. Careful, skilled application can reduce the problem, but many contractors either aren't skilled, or can't be bothered since their customers don't know the difference.
AND . . . the effects of acid-washing a pool with COLORED plaster can be unpredictable. Personally, I don't have enough experience with colored plaster to know how to tell whether a colored plaster pool can be acid washed or not.
Colored plaster is imperfect at best. The nice marbled swirls you can see in a new application will amplify as the pool ages, making for an odd, blotchy look. I've seen walls bleach white while the floor is still dark. I think a lot of the premature and irregular fading has to do with not paying attention to chemical manufacturer warnings for colored pools.
Acid washing is a big gamble, and has some negative results as Ben mentioned. If you can determine that only the top layer is faded and reaching down a little will get your color back, look at "polishing" your plaster. It's a lot of work to do right. Really expensive if you have someone do it while the water is in the pool. Still kind of expensive with the pool drained. The right equipment isn't cheap, and it doesn't seem to be something that produces a lot of work.
I am very much against painting pools. It's cheaper up front, but not in the long run. To give you an idea, we paint roughly 10 pools a year compared to plastering 30-50 pools a year. I'll maybe have a problem with 1 or 2 plaster jobs, and that is rare. I can count on going back to at least a quarter of the paint jobs for something. And understand this, we are meticulous. 1, because if I'm going to do it, I'm going to do it right. 2, I know the more care I put into it up front, the less the chances are that I'll have to go back.
Greg
Marin Pool Restoration
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