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Updated: 11 years 24 weeks ago

Roof to wall

Fri, 05/24/2013 - 17:30
This home was built in 2005. I don't think I will be doing a wind mitigation inspection for the home, but if I were, what would this be classified as on the 1802 form?

I'll contact Simpson Tuesday as I seem to remember seeing this strap in their catalog.
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Furnace room door opens in

Fri, 05/24/2013 - 16:32
When I went to furnace school a long time ago, we were told that furnace room doors should open out. However, I am unable to find this in the Alberta building code, it only says that furnace rooms must have a door, (DOH!)

The reasoning was that if a someone was in the room and passed out because they electrocuted or gassed themselves, they might fall in front of the door, so if the door opens in, the dead or incapacitated service man would be blocking the door.

I just left a door opening in furnace room but it was plenty big enough that a service man down could be shoved aside and the door opened, provided of course that the service guy or gal was smaller than William the Refrigerator Perry, so I don't want to say anything about it unless I have to.

Clare furnace age

Fri, 05/24/2013 - 16:20
Need age of Clare gas furnace M/N BAS-100, S/N 0-4343.

InterNACHI has 19 employees, but Nick and I are the only ones in today.

Fri, 05/24/2013 - 11:24
Have a fun and relaxing weekend everyone!

Lime Deposit?

Fri, 05/24/2013 - 08:03
Need help diagnosing this deposit on the water line.

Well water
Hot water heater Hot side
Copper pipe

Is the deposit build up from a previous leak?

Is the deposit on the copper pipe Salt, Calcium, or Lime?

Not an active leak during the inspection.

Attachment 65634
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Trane System Blower Motor

Fri, 05/24/2013 - 06:40
I'm having issues with a blower motor at my own house. I noticed a slight burning smell almost like a curling iron that has been left on if anyone is familiar with that smell. So I popped open the Air Handler access panel and noticed the motor seemed to be running slower than usual. I went ahead and replaced the run capacitor, however, that didn't help even though the other one was slightly under tolerance.

So I pulled the 1/6 HP blower motor out. It is a 3 spd single phase, 1060 RPM, 230V. There was one red wire coming to the B terminal on the motor, which I have to believe is the power source. The motor was rated at 1.15 AMPS and when I put a clampon meter across the line I was getting that. It is 14 years old. It only has 1 yellow wire coming from it and 1 black wire. Then there is the ground that was screwed to one of the mounting bolts. I checked the resistance across all the terminals and this is what I found:

Yel to Blk = 88.3 ohms

Blk to Term A = 52.5 ohms
Blk to Term B = 37.9 ohms
Blk to Term C = 33.0 ohms

Yel to Term A = 74.7 ohms
Yel to Term B = 60.1 ohms
Yel to Term C = 55.2 ohms

A to B = 14.6
B to C = 4.9
C to A = 19.4

Problem is I'm not totally certain on what these measurements mean, other than the sum of the terminals A to B and B to C equal the measurment between the terminals C to A.

I just need to know if this is a bad motor because of the smell that we were smelling from the vents directly below where the Air Handler sits in the attic. Can someone please explain how much of this is relevant and what it should or should not read. The only examples I could find on line had a lot more wires coming from the motor, whereas mine only had the Yellow and Black. Any assistance would be greatly appreciated.


Regards,

Steve :(

Well, I never imagined we'd grow so big that we'd need a forklift...

Fri, 05/24/2013 - 01:25
... but we're getting a forklift. Thanks to our distributor Inspector Outlet, our product sales keep growing.

If only everything was this easy.

Thu, 05/23/2013 - 23:05
Can you guess what made me think there might be a leak in the roof?
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200 Amp Panel Main Breaker not used

Thu, 05/23/2013 - 19:28
I found this 200-amp panel in a bedroom closet. The 200 amp main breaker is not being used. The 100 Amp breakers on the lower left are feeding the panel. I have never seen this before. Is this OK? (There are many more issues with the panel but this I have never seen)
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Well equipment

Thu, 05/23/2013 - 19:14
OK this is no excuse however I live in the city and do not run across a ton of wells and when I do I have never seen a plastic covered tub? So my client is wierded out by this tub of water in the basement and now his water quality failed the total coliform and mostly likely he will relate it to this tub. Are they possibly related? And what is this tub, just a holding basin?
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InterNACHI, amazing!

Thu, 05/23/2013 - 18:39
Hi all,
I have not been here in a while. It has been 10 amazing NACHI years!!!
I want to thank the organization for all of the support to our members. when I started there were a fraction of the members and so much has transpired. A huge thank you to Nick and all of the staff for creating the biggest and best home inspection organization in the world!
NH now has over 300 licensed inspectors and as a licensing board member I can say that 90% of those licensees are INACHI members.
The education offered through our organization is amazing and constantly growing and our NH members are able to meet their continuing education thanks to INACHI!
Thank you Nick and staff!!
Carla Horne
10 year member!

WDO alert near NOLA

Thu, 05/23/2013 - 18:26
This is apparently an annual occurrence, as swarms of Formosan termites fill the skies near NOLA this week:

http://www.nola.com/environment/inde...an_termit.html

Of course, you can learn all you need to know about these destructive little imports by (**shameless plug alert!**) purchasing our full-color WDO Inspection Field Guide from Inspector Outlet, now at 40% off! ;)
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I can't believe this one!

Thu, 05/23/2013 - 18:22
Did an inspection on a 1956 ranch in a nearby suburb. It had a 25 x 25' rear addition, added subsequently. The house was structural brick with a frame addition covered with T-111. The original was over a dirt crawl with a full basement under the addition.

The grade around the rear addition was all poured concrete, but was only about 1/2" below the T-111 and there was evidence of old Great Stuff in the gap.

In the basement:
  • 2 x 10 floor joists with a doubled 2 x 12 central beam. The beam was supported by the foundation walls and 2 4 x 4 wooden posts with no footings, just resting on the slab (but no cracks in the slab floor, surprisingly).
  • On the east (right) side, the original joists were severly notched, but sistered. The sisters were only 4' long and held to the original joists by 1/4" carriage bolts.
  • There were only 5 sill plate bolts, non of which with washers or nuts, and none on the north side. The sill plate was not treated lumber. The sill plate was lifted and twisted (at most, 30 degrees). There were places where there was as much as a 1 1/2" gap between the sill plate and the foundation wall. Sunlight was clearly visable in some spots.
  • The top of the foundation had a brick ledger, but the ledge was on the inside, not the outside.
  • The top of the foundation wall was 1/4" higher than the exterior concrete patio. This patio was sloped towards the house. I turned on a hose and 5 minutes later there was a waterfall over the foundation into the basement.
The buyer was an electrician. Took me 15 minutes to convince him that a) this was messed up and b) he might want to walk away.

Shortest report I ever wrote. Just a cover sheet and a 1 1/2 page introduction explaining the major bullet points.

Busy time, these last two weeks, but most of the houses were rear POS's, with silly, stupid and dangerous issues.

Additionally:
  • Backdrafting water heater.
  • Condensate and humidifier drain emptying, directly, to crawlspace.
  • Portion of ductwork in crawlspace (about 2') artfully constructed of duct tape.
  • Bathrooms exhausts venting to attic.
  • Stab-loc panel dead front almost completely embedded in the drywall mud.
  • Service drop rubbing on garage roof. Drop only 9' above driveway.
  • BUT: All new kitchen cabinets and granite countertops, Toto toilets with bidets, really nice tile in the shower enclosures and all that other flipper crap.
Enjoy!

I will now gently settle into an alcoholic stupor. :mrgreen:
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Roof Condition Certifications

Thu, 05/23/2013 - 18:08
Have you all noticed a change in policy at our favorite underwriter?

In recent weeks I have had several calls to do a re-inspection on a roof I inspected last year. It seems that the life expectancy of the roofs in question was stated at 4-6 years. Now we know that they will opt for the 4 year expectancy, but they now have a new twist -

Since a year has gone by you would think that the roof now has a life expectancy of 3-5 years (Three in the eyes of the clerical giants), and thereby meets the requirement for a minimum of 3 years life. - Easy math, right?

Not so fast my friends!!! Since the roof inspection was performed in April 2012 and the policy renews in June - that is less than the necessary 3 years and hence a roof replacement or updated inspection or is needed. So theoretically if you do an inspection today, based on a non-renewal letter and state the life expectancy of 3 years for a policy renewing in July - they will be denied coverage!

Now I don't know about you guys, but I have never had much luck finding the expiration date on the shingles, but do you suppose we should be putting more exact figures on our reports? Say....3 years, 2 months and 23 days...

Insurance question

Thu, 05/23/2013 - 17:24
I am currently registered to take the inspector's exam, and as most of you already know, the next step is to get insurance. My question is this: Exactly what insurance is required? Is it E&O for 100,000, or is it both E&O and 100,000 in general liability? I am a bit confused about this, and want to buy only what is necessary at this point.

New logo for Safe-T Home Inspection

Thu, 05/23/2013 - 16:59
InterNACHI Design & Print Services: http://printservices.nachi.org/

Website Design & Support: inspectorpages.com

Marketing contact: jessica@internachi.org
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Unreadable Data Plates

Thu, 05/23/2013 - 16:47
Is their a definite way to determine the age of a package unit without the main data plate? Can a date code be obtained from the fan motor?

Failing basement wall, structural engineering group says

Thu, 05/23/2013 - 06:19
'It's failing from soil pressure'....well, if so then you need to recommed EXTERIOR waterproofing, NOT just put in tie backs or carbon fiber straps inside, sheesh! Do any patching on the wall inside or recommend installing an interior system would be incompetent.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0st0_soWpfs
All due respect but C''''''''''MON!

You are only talking about the horizontal crack that is visible inside but apparently you don't know (least don't shed any insight on) that there will be OTHER exterior cracks, likely and at least some vertical cracks, possibly 1 or more step cracks and it is because of THOSE and THROUGH those that water is entering and causing what ya see on some of the blocks inside.

Installing carbon straps etc does NOT relieve/lessen ANY exterior soil pressure/weight!

And what ya also don't say/mention is the possibilty of underground tree ROOTS or concrete against-wall or a porch/footing etc that also can CAUSE cracks,leaks,staining inside. So again, installing carbon straps etc inside does not remove any of these possibilities.

And one more time, the wall has EXTERIOR cracks and there is ONE means of waterproofing those exterior cracks/cracked parging which is the only thing that will STOP further water from entering the blocks,passing through joints etc. Ya think water passing through joints don't/can't WEAKEN a wall further? C'''''''''mon!!! #-o

And what about the possibility of some exterior blocks that can/could be disintegrating....deteriorating, like this..............BOWED WALL,
http://picasaweb.google.com/10104903...65069188493442
See any parging???
DETERIORATED BLOCKS,
http://picasaweb.google.com/10104903...65133328086770
Click duh photos to ENLARGE 'em.....what happened to some of the BLOCKS, where did they go!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! It's MAGIC! lolol
So, what good is recommending carbon straps etc on the inside when the PROBLEMS are outside like this! How much are homeowners paying SE's for these recommendations?!

What about when 1 or more underground TREE ROOTS was part or all of the CAUSE of cracks in wall and leaky basement, like this.......
http://picasaweb.google.com/10104903...83457360199010
So, NOT even CONSIDER/think about that shtt like this is possible?!?!
Huh??????????
Just leave the exterior cracks,joints OPEN???????
Leave the clay soil and-or underground tree roots or porch footing etc etc against the wall and install carbon straps instead!!!! lolOlOLlOoll

Install wall anchors like this and what, raise the grade?!?!?
http://picasaweb.google.com/10104903...aterproofing36


Do you believe in magic/The BUBBA Spoonful
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ysRa5HDB2ZY

Young Girl........get outta Bubba's mind
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qJFVPxBpezk

They called her.....Dawn (nice tops on waitresses eh, got milk?)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ke4j3tz2YX8

Journey to the center of the mind....+ go go go go go go girlies
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UN2VNFpiGWo