Unless you have some experience with concrete or any kind of plaster, i do not recommend it. This is a ultra specialized trade. it takes years to become a decent trowel man. First, your pool needs to be drained, as soon as you can get to the main drain on the deep end of your pool, remove the cover and unplug the bottom of it. This is a very important step , in case you have a lot of ground water, the pressure coming from underneath of your pool must be released by pulling the plug inside your main drain. After that, you will have to cut right underneath the tile line, all the way around. Cut it in a 45 degree angle, about 2 inches wide. A good bath with muriatic acid is the next step. Use a watering can to pour it; be careful with the fumes from the acid. The final touch would be the use of a concrete mixer to mix the plaster. You can carry it with a wheelbarrow and dump it into the pool. Use a round edge trowel to pull the plaster up on the walls. This is a very concise description of this process. Like i said before, unless you have some skills using a trowel, it is better to live it to a professional pool plaster company.
I have etching in my inground concrette pool and i need to know how to fix it. the pool was made in 1973 i bought the house three years ago.
Yes it can be done
It is know to be concrete, gunite or shotcrete.
They last longer and easier to take care of.
it depends on what the pool is made of if it is concrete then all of if its carbon fiber then about half of it.
The wall is steel and concrete so the short answer is that you do not.
the concrete should be 6" according to this site http://www.de-fontenay.com/poolcon4.htm
Justin Bieber has a inground pool
Yes. Ron Lacher Pool Engineering in southern California probably has an engineering detail showing how to build it.
Any cracks that are in the pool, and if it leaks. See if you can get anyone to come out and inspect the pool.
absolutly not In the case of most pools esp, pools with liners, the concrete rim around the pool is an integral part of the whole structure. It serves a solid rim to support the walls of the pool.
No