FactuallyUnscrupulou [he/him]

  • 2 Posts
  • 823 Comments
Joined 4 years ago
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Cake day: July 29th, 2020

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  • I guess this is a dumb request, but since everyone else is airing their grievances I'd like to profess mine. Way back during the rail worker strike I had a couple comments deleted for being reactionary by the mod team. I thought that was unfair and would like those comments undeleted or any strike against me removed or whatever. I expressed my experiences as a tradesmen in a union and my assessment that workers in the West can sometimes consider themselves labor aristocrats. I know it's the stupidest little thing, but yeah mods and admins can be morons sometimes.
















  • Can you get an inspection with this house or ask for repair credit? If you were really concerned about the foundation integrity I'd pull in an inspector before buying. It could be that the brick that's cracked isn't structural and it's no big deal. It could be that you have vertical cracks in the foundation from settling and a repair guy could inject some shit in it for maybe 1-2 grand. If it's horizontal cracks though you're looking at excavation, demo and replace while shoring up the house which is that huge cost you want to avoid.

    You mentioned it's in the Southeast so if you aren't in that freeze/thaw cycle the cracks wont grow as quickly as up North if they do start leaking. Also, when you say crawlspace do you mean most of the floor is on foundation pads with posts throughout the interior? I'm just not sure what the typical foundation on a house down there would be made of.

    I closed on my house without hiring an inspector and I'm sort of paying the price. I've got a couple foundation issues with a small leak and this pilaster they set for a corner addition that settled.


  • -What region of the US are we talking and how old is the house?

    -Is this a full basement?

    -Is the brick just a veneer or is the entire foundation structurally brick? Most foundations are poured concrete, CMU block, or stone for really old homes.

    Most commercial CMU walls have a control joint, they stop laying the running bond (staggered pattern) and leave a vertical joint that allows expansion and settling to occur without head joints (mortar joints on the sides of the brick) cracking, residential foundation walls wouldn't have that detail so it's much more common for a crack to appear on houses. If the bed joints (joints on top and bottom of brick) were cracking you have a bigger issue because that could indicate the foundation wall is buckling from the lateral/hydrostatic pressure.