Saturday, December 19th, 2009 at
3:30 am
moved into a house (From 70’s), and the water pressure is poor inside. Its a single story 3 bedroom ranch. We have a well. I changed the shower head and removed the restrictor to see if that fixed it, didn’t. When the head is off and I turn on the water it doesn’t seem that strong. Now when I go outside and turn on the spigot it comes out very fast. I would say no where in the house does it seem excellent, although the tub seems adequate. Additionally but possibly unrelated the secondary bath which is on the opposite side of the house takes a good 1-2 minutes to warm up. But the pressure on the hot water doesn’t seem any different than the cold water. The water pump says 50psi on the dial outside. Please give me some advice (Other than just call a plumber)… Thank you in advance.
Monday, November 2nd, 2009 at
3:32 am
so yesterday she did a home inspection and was supposed to be here at 1:15 but end up showing up at 11:50 she said that had called me but she didnt i didnt get a call until 11:57 telling me she was a my door.so when she came in i informed her that this was not my house and that i was renting a room from my boyfriends mother.so i took her to the room which has 3 bed a tv a computer toys and other stuff. so today she sent me a letter sayin i wasnt approved.but can appeal sowhat should i do ?
Tuesday, October 20th, 2009 at
3:33 pm
I mean, geez, it’s like the plumbing broke right after he installed it.
Tuesday, August 4th, 2009 at
9:27 am
My sister in law bought a car from a dealership in Wisconsin on Saturday (2/9/08) Inspection papers on car said car was tip top minus air conditioning, she drove it home, parked it overnight and it wouldn’t start Sunday…She finally had a shop look at it this morning and they say it needs a transmission and oil pump for 3500.00.
Can she legally ask for her money back?
It is a 1993 Ford Taurus, so is not brand new by anyone’s standards.
Thanks all!
Tuesday, July 14th, 2009 at
3:25 pm
I had a friend of the family do an “unofficial” home inspection (no pay or anything, just a pat on the back and a beer).
My worry is that if there is something wrong with the house, I won’t want to turn around and have to collect from him, god forbid if anything was major.
I don’t want to use a home inspector, but the only reason I would was that if the licensed inspector made an error, he would be liable for anything he missed, correct?
For example, if my roof leaks, and he didn’t catch that, he would be liable for damages, correct? Isn’t that the point of getting a home inspector?
Wednesday, June 24th, 2009 at
9:21 am
At first my bathtub pipes had 2 problems. Leaking in the wall and at the faucets. So I replaced everything in sight. The leak in the wall is gone but I cant get the faucets to stop leaking. I used all brand new parts, plumbers tape, and put it all back together EXACTLY the way I found it. One attempt after another I have been troubleshooting it for hours. I am soooo frustrated! Can someone help me please? Maybe I am missing a step.
Thursday, April 16th, 2009 at
3:30 am
It depends on where the leak is or what exactly is leaking.
Newer tub faucets(20 years old) have an “o-ring” that wears out. If you can get the water turned off. Then you can take the faucet apart. if you can… take it to a hardware store and find a new o-ring to fit. It will be cheap-like less than a dollar. Replace it and reinstall.