It does not make any difference wether you use gunite or shotcrete both will do the job. The important part is your pool company or sub good at the method of application. There are bad gunite jobs and bad shotcrete jobs.
It does not make any difference wether you use gunite or shotcrete both will do the job. The important part is your pool company or sub good at the method of application. There are bad gunite jobs and bad shotcrete jobs.
I have a shotcrete pool. In all of my research, shotcrete seem to be the best with the only downside being slump. This is where the heavy concrete tends to not stay straight on the walls. The gunite seemed to need more expertise to be applied and could have more problems with having the higher strength of the lareger aggregrate concrete. Based on everything, I choose the shotcrete and I am very happy I did. The slump prblem never happened and the pool looks beautiful. I would worry if the the guy running the gunite gun is learning to do it on your pool or hes an expert. Seems that he could ruin your pool and it may take a few years to find out (or you can have a piece of the pool sent out and tested for hardness). The question is whether you trust the guy they send to your house to mix the gunite on site or the concrete plant that does this all the time. I chose the concrete plant (shotcrete pool).
My two cents
John
JonnyG (Hunterdon, NJ)
30,000 Gal IG Shotcrete (Carlton Pools)
SW Generator
6ft Sheer Descent
Jandy equipment (60sf DE filter)
Zodiac Mars booster pump cleaner
Teledyne Lars 400,00 Btu heater
BBB believer
Well, the pool contractor is offering a "lifetime warranty" on the gunite pool structure. They tell me they 1 guy that does their gunite, he has been doing it for 20 years. These make me feel a little better about the whole thing.
I would go with what the pool builder is most experienced at installing.
Completed 8/21/06
14,000 gallon 3'-6' concrete pool with Diamond Brite
Spa with spillway
250K BTU gas heater (for spa)
SWCG - Aqua Rite
Hayward Super II Pump - Cartridge filter
See pictures here http://www.philsimmons.com/family/ga...mages&keyword=
This makes a lot of sense. Our builder had bad experience with shotgrete here in the middle of Oklahoma. He said that our shotcrete just didn't hold up as well to our shifting red clay. He thinks it would be fine in most other types of soil.Originally Posted by Simmons99
I can't say how true that is at all, but as Simmons99 says, use what the builder is experienced at installing.
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