Jerry Lozier
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Posts posted by Jerry Lozier
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that's refreshing.
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Then a lawyer might say " What we have here is a 'potential' slip and fall hazard... Hardwood stairs needs that raised area so my client who always walks with his socks on doesn't slip, and if he does the raised area would keep his feet from sliding over the edge and him from falling"
The inspector should have recommended non slip steps.... hmmmm
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Whether it is a code violation or not, they are paying for your opinion. It can be a trip hazard without being IRC violation.
My comment would be if I felt it was unsafe: "Raised trim on stairway steps is a potential trip hazard. For your families and guests enhanced safety recommend a qualified professional remove the trim so this hazard no longer exists"
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Could it be coming from the water heater drain pan? That is my first guess. I see them like that fairly often with 1 1/2 pipe. Maybe it's an extension.
The tank may be leaking, regardless of the faucets.
At least 30' from water heater, and laundry areas... bizarre.
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2001 (vacant for a couple months) home. Trying to figure out what this 2" ABS pipe is for. Old stains, standing water and dripping water from pipe after I ran a bunch of faucets in the home. It was near a bathroom, which was behind bearing wall... any ideas??
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I see a lot of these, some have cheezy alum turnbuckles like you would use on a clothes line
Agree with Greg, and they need to be installed at 45 degree angle also.
For my report (here in WA): Tiedowns installed likely met the standards when they were installed, They do not meet todays seismic tiedown standards. A structural engineer needs to evaluate and offer remedies if you need a foundation certification.
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yesterdays inspection, 40 years old in snow country.
beside the obvious most of footings were not below frost line that I could tell. No evidence of movement though. Wood structure mostly nailed together, few lags or bolts... told them to get structural engineer to evaluate and offer remedies before closing.
great place from the deck up!
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I can't see if that is a feeder to or a feeder from. I suppose it could be either, depending on what you plug in to that receptacle. [:-party]
You are correct... however It was setup for a generator to power a several breakers including well. Pigtail was hanging on the wall
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Unbelievable what you see sometimes. I certainly let the HO know how stupid and dangerous crap like that is, even if they did it themselves. Especially if they did it themselves!
Basically what I told the buyer.
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I find kitchen 'track' and counter receptacles all go to gfci (resets) receptacles in pantrys often, local thing for high end homes.
As far as kitchen lighting circuit thats a problem. Amazing you found that.
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Menu above. Click on "Library" then "Popular Files".
That be it.... thank you!!
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Trying to find the Furnace and A/C age reference sheets that were linked/ posted on TIJ at one time..... anyone have that link and or similar
thank you. Jerry
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Tom,
our temps are several weeks below freezing in winter to 110+ periodically thru out summer.
Jim,
cheapest route... lessen the condensation, enough heat loss through insulated ceiling to drip and evidence on sheetrock ceilings at eave side wall intersect
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25 year old metal roof on shop. Visqueen is shot,
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My recommendation was a metal roof contractor remove metal and install vinyl face insulation batt (don't know what they call that type of insulation material)
Anyone have experience with spray foam on inside in this situation as am concerned about with wood under the foam or will that ever be a trapped (moisture) problem if all is dry when applied??
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"Sometimes the local building standards do not address these things, but deficiencies in local enforcement do not make the installation safe or adequate and especially best practice." I think I got that from a past post on TIJ??
That being said: Anybody ever recommend impel or cobra rods??
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thank you.
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Trying to think of any reasons why A/C on a ground (water) source heat pump could not be operated when outside temp is below 60-65 degrees and the same with heat side above 65 degrees.
Beings it does not have an outside condensing unit???
Inquiring minds need to know??
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Install GFCIs in potential wet areas, kitchen, bath, exterior, garage
Dedicated grounded receptacles per you specific needs is a good place to start.
This article may help you:
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Contact Attorney Joe Ferry at joeferry.com
Agreed, had him check out my contract a few years ago, made some changes that helped me fight off a meritless claim last year.
My contract, a good inspection report, the WA SOP and a couple letters from Mr Ferry all helped it go away.
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Thanks Kurt,
I called it asphalt- gravel and appears to be recently recoated and new gravel.
Even at that would not know what coal tar looks like
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May be a regional thing in your wetter area. No gutter requirement on east side so I don't know if roofing manufacturers pick and choose their warranties by climate.
Only time I call them is when an actual downspout is dumping on shingles.
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Good call John and Kurt... from the owners
"In January of 2009, the whole XXX River area had not only received several feet of new snow, but then it rained about 15 inches in the span of 2 days. This created a massive amount of run-off and localized flooding in the whole area.
We had received quite a bit of snow prior to this as well so I had a neighbor come over and occasionally shovel the snow off our deck (we live over 120 miles away so we rely on locals for snow removal and plowing). He shoveled the snow just randomly over the deck so that it created a big pile of snow around the perimeter of the patio below the deck. When all the rain hit, there was essentially a river of water that was coming down XXX Road and our driveway was a low point at which the water flowed down into, down the side of our cabin, then behind the ?snow dam? that was created by the shoveled snow from the deck. This water build up behind the snow dam and then proceeded to then flood back into the garage and entire lower level of the cabin. The water rose about a foot and then remained for about a day before a small section of the snow dam broke loose from around the patio and the water drained out".












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This is so bad....
in Report Writing and the Written Word
Posted
Hi Mike, kinda ironic that the banner between your last post and my typing this says:
Mold Inspection And Removal
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its a conspiracy