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Victor DaGraca
06-16-2007, 03:32 PM
I had to shake my head. :confused:

Bruce Breedlove
06-16-2007, 03:37 PM
Did you mean this house was constructed by a seven-year-old kid?

I especially like the cut trusses. Nice work!

Jon Randolph
06-16-2007, 04:13 PM
Homeowner Quote - "Now why in the world would you try to sell me an inspection on a new home? What could possibly be wrong with a home of this age?"


BTW, I inspected one this week that was only 3 years old with a 1/2" wide (at the top) v shaped crack in the foundation under a steel girder. Home also had radon at a level of 13.7.

Jerry Peck
06-16-2007, 05:51 PM
First photo:
1) There 'could be' a flashing there, I would be careful about stating 'No flashing'.
2) I would add, at the gutter discharging onto the roof 'which could lead to premature shingle failure'.
3) Is that another exposed nail up under the gutter?

Next photo - Smurf is not allowed for that use either. Also, looks like a leak on the valve too.

Last photo - Instead of stating on the photo 'metal is recommended', state 'plastic and foil is prohibited, must rigid metal or flexible metal'. (Not to mention that it is crushed down in size at the ultra sharp bend to the wall, which is not allowed either.)

Thom Walker
06-16-2007, 06:44 PM
Those are some great pictures. I'm not sure I have ever seen a framing job quite that bad. And I'm certain I've never seen one in a seaward hurricane zone, at least not in the last 10 years. Not that it matters on a job that bad, but I don't see any clips or spacing otherise in the decking. Was any present?:)

Bruce Breedlove
06-16-2007, 09:26 PM
BTW, I inspected one this week that was only 3 years old with a 1/2" wide (at the top) v shaped crack in the foundation under a steel girder. Home also had radon at a level of 13.7.

As I'm sure you know, the elevated radon cannot be blamed on poor building practices.

Jerry Peck
06-16-2007, 09:44 PM
As I'm sure you know, the elevated radon cannot be blamed on poor building practices.

To an extent, it can.

If you are a builder building in an area with elevated radon, NOT building in radon resistance and mitigation systems is (in my opinion) "poor building practices".

Bruce Breedlove
06-16-2007, 11:07 PM
Many builders feel that if they include a radon mitigation system (passive or active) in their new homes it draws attention to radon and may make potential buyers think the house must have had a serious radon problem if it was bad enough for the builder to put in a mitigation system. As backward as that thinking is it is pretty common.

Victor DaGraca
06-17-2007, 05:11 AM
Bruce;
It might as well have been........

Jerry;
as usual... advice worth heeding. My summary page stated rigid metal for vent, I told my client that by the time a plumber was called in, he might just as well spring for a new unit. I used the words "Premature shingle failure" sounds like words from a male enhancement ad. Lots of exposed nails.

Thom; "h" clips were there. Like it mattered, with the rest of the job being done the way it was.


Here's some more pics:

Eric Barker
06-17-2007, 01:56 PM
New construction last week. $1m+.
Many framing errors. In addition to this mess, the lintel over the garage 2 bay o.h. door was deflected with separation in the mortar at 3 locations - probably all undersized to carry the large brick veneer dormer above

Victor DaGraca
06-17-2007, 02:42 PM
I think that Brians post (another thread) (http://www.inspectionnews.net/home_inspection/inspection-news-around-net/1640-cheap-ain-t-cheap-nashville-scene.html) was dead on.
You can import all the cheap labor you need, but,
"It doesn’t matter if the laborers are from Mexico, Mars or MIT. If they haven’t been taught how to build a house right, they will screw things up"