Results 1 to 8 of 8
			
		Thread: Duck pond on the roof
- 
	02-19-2015, 07:28 PM #1 Duck pond on the roof Duck pond on the roofHow much can a roof take? Ponding can worsen the sag on an old home - more ponding, more sagging. The seller said the roofing material was 1 year old - said there were 2 patches on the roof (how come if its only 1 y.o.?). this pond remained after a rain 10 days ago. 
 To make matters worse, the roofer layed down material over a number of conduits on the roof. Each conduit ridge provided further blockage to the roof draining properly.
 No stains inside, but it is freshly painted.
 Similar Threads:
 
- 
	02-19-2015, 07:31 PM #2 Re: Duck pond on the roof Re: Duck pond on the roof
 
- 
	02-19-2015, 07:40 PM #3 Re: Duck pond on the roof Re: Duck pond on the roofWhat JP said, the 'roofer' did the home owner a major disservice, and he wasted thousands on a useless roof. 
 
 A small pond should dry up in 48 hrs. A large pond can sometimes have a drain installed in it. Flat roofs on the West Coast, gotta love it.
 John Kogel, RHI, BC HI Lic #47455
 www.allsafehome.ca
 
- 
	02-19-2015, 07:53 PM #4 Re: Duck pond on the roof Re: Duck pond on the roofThe roof framing is a wood beam with plank sheathing. It's a pretty good sized open area - you can get the gist of it from the last picture. Big beams, spanning the open space. 40 year old house and getting a little sway back. What worked when new is not what works today. If it had a slope, the slope is now toward the middle. Having a roof drain in the middle would help, but wouldn't look good in the living room.  
 
 
- 
	02-19-2015, 09:11 PM #5 Re: Duck pond on the roof Re: Duck pond on the roof[QUOTE= Having a roof drain in the middle would help, but wouldn't look good in the living room.  [/QUOTE] [/QUOTE]
 
 Throw in a pile of rock and call it a water feature.
 
 
- 
	02-19-2015, 10:44 PM #6 Re: Duck pond on the roof Re: Duck pond on the roof
 
- 
	02-27-2015, 07:09 PM #7 Re: Duck pond on the roof Re: Duck pond on the roofIs this one of those "flips"? The fake wood floors are telling. I wish someone would make a blog featuring nothing but crappy flips & the shortcuts they take. 
 
 PS not an inspector, just an inspector appreciator if I may introduce myself, came here for the laffs, love the images of failed DIYS and bloopers/follies. Bought enough homes in my lifetime to accrue basic knowledge of homeowner woes such as knob & tube wiring, pre-3' waste pipe requirements, etc etc. if I may introduce myself, came here for the laffs, love the images of failed DIYS and bloopers/follies. Bought enough homes in my lifetime to accrue basic knowledge of homeowner woes such as knob & tube wiring, pre-3' waste pipe requirements, etc etc.
 
 
- 
	02-27-2015, 08:07 PM #8 Re: Duck pond on the roof Re: Duck pond on the roofHello Kristin 
 Welcome to the board. Good to hear from you. You have experience as a buyer, and consumer you say, and an eye for details. I sure want to hear from your experiences what you like about inspectors. As an inspector I would not necessarily comment on cosmetics, or choice of materials (like wood floors or laminates (as I call them)) versus tile, carpet, stone, concrete floors, etc. If the floor is damaged somehow, or interferes with usage, then I would comment.
 You, as a consumer can make choices to replace or re-cover flooring materials. I, myself thought this was a really nice floor - real wood, not laminate. Some sort of exotic wood - looked very nice.
 To answer though, this is a flipper, and there were lots of upgrades - just not the roof. 
 
 


 
 
						
					 
					
					
 
				
				
				
					 Reply With Quote
  Reply With Quote Originally Posted by Chris Weekly
 Originally Posted by Chris Weekly
					

Bookmarks