EXTREME Foundation Damage. Local home inspector says it's just fine!

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  • Опубликовано: 5 сен 2024
  • A seller's real estate agent offered a recent home inspection report that said the foundation was fine.
    This is the second worse structural damage I've inspected in a residential home. This house has shifted on its foundation and is experiencing structural movement towards the neighbors house next door.
    #foundationcracks #structure #bigbunchanope #inspector_preston #bigbunchofnope #Kincaidhomeinspection #realtor #homeinspector #homeinspection #homeinspectionhorrors #realestate

Комментарии • 131

  • @mrcryptozoic817
    @mrcryptozoic817 6 месяцев назад +48

    I was afraid the buyer had already put their money on the table. So GLAD at the end that they listened to you and didn't. The other inspector should be sued for fraud and blacklisted.

    • @robyarrow9690
      @robyarrow9690 6 месяцев назад +10

      Home inspectors need to be held to the same standards as licensed engineers are, which is if significant deficiencies are found. that were obvious to the home inspector they need to be held liable for damages. As of right now, the licensing process for home inspectors is far too easy at least in the state of Virginia.

    • @Inspector_preston
      @Inspector_preston  5 месяцев назад +2

      Me too! 😊

    • @absolutelynonameslef
      @absolutelynonameslef 5 месяцев назад

      @robyarrow9690 if you require licensing and liability insurance for a home inspector, be prepared to pay $5k for a typical inspection.
      No one will take on that kind of cost and liability for a measly few hundred bucks.

  • @baratono
    @baratono 6 месяцев назад +37

    Wow! I wouldn't park my cars next to that thing.

  • @michaelpidanick7458
    @michaelpidanick7458 6 месяцев назад +36

    Don’t touch that punching bag! Whole house may end up in neighbors driveway.

  • @sockatume
    @sockatume 4 месяца назад +7

    Seems like this house is about to become the neighbour’s problem.

  • @leeb.7188
    @leeb.7188 6 месяцев назад +14

    I was totally burned by an inspector who was hired by the seller’s realtor. Since then, I’ve always hired my own inspector. You’d be a fool not to, as a home is such a huge purchase and there are things that can be wrong with it that you won’t be aware of without a professional on your side.

  • @LunaticEdit
    @LunaticEdit 6 месяцев назад +26

    I was physically uncomfortable watching you walk around in that basement after seeing that displacement. How is that building not condemned?

  • @edwardantrobusjr2253
    @edwardantrobusjr2253 6 месяцев назад +12

    😢 That house is just plain scary. For starters, I can't believe someone was allowed to build that close to the property line. That going to make remediation very difficult.

    • @hotpuppy1
      @hotpuppy1 6 месяцев назад

      Very common. My city
      is like that.

    • @drozcompany4132
      @drozcompany4132 2 дня назад

      I know right? Around here in more rural Michigan we usually have setbacks in the range of 10 feet minimum, although there are some communities where it seems the houses are built right to the line.

  • @prayersofangel2182
    @prayersofangel2182 6 месяцев назад +20

    That is insane, the individual who inspected and said it was fine should be fined or charged for gross negligence. We need what you do to be mandated on every home sale in North America for consumer protection. Looking forward to learning a whole lot by following you, great content sir!

    • @Inspector_preston
      @Inspector_preston  6 месяцев назад +7

      Crazy thing, the EXACT same inspector did the EXACT same thing today at a different house. February 28, 2024...

    • @mikebutts8211
      @mikebutts8211 2 месяца назад

      What I found as a licensed home inspector was that sometimes new inspectors are afraid of "breaking the deal" which might result in fewer referrals from realtors. I never gave a damn about that. Matter of fact I refused to work with unscrupulous realtors.😊

  • @lindawilson4625
    @lindawilson4625 6 месяцев назад +4

    A good rule of thumb is to use an inspector that scares the realestate agents, not the one they recommend. You'll get the report you need to make an informed decision about the house before you buy.

  • @gusmueller4413
    @gusmueller4413 6 месяцев назад +12

    my house had a similar, though not as extreme issue and passed inspection with flying colors. i later found water coming through a wall in the finished basement. i tore off the sheet rock and found a crack with 3/4 inch displacement caused by water pressure on the uphill side of the house. it had shoved the entire house over by at least that amount. i dug out all the way down to the footings and around the corner by hand, put in gutters on the roof, laid additional 4 inch drainage pipe, filled the trench with gravel, and covered it all with permeable cloth. the movement stopped after that, and the house has now been stable for 20 years. but the basement walls parallel to that problem foundation wall all still lean by an impressive amount.

  • @mikeprimm4077
    @mikeprimm4077 6 месяцев назад +10

    that driveway should have had a retaining wall made out of solid concrete from day one, the whole side of the hill is eroding into the neighbor's driveway, it's causing the house to settle and shift, I would be genuinely concerned for the safety of the occupants of that building, and for the neighbors potential property damage incurred by that Hill finally collapsing in the house tumbling into their driveway. I'm not an alarmist but I would maybe inform the neighbors that there is a more than 0% probability that one morning when they walk outside to go to work they're going to see a house sitting on top of the vehicles

  • @user-uw8cz5eh1h
    @user-uw8cz5eh1h 5 месяцев назад +2

    That buyer should have never gotten to this point. As soon as you walk to the side of the house that is a clear sign to RUN AWAY

  • @Tindog81476
    @Tindog81476 6 месяцев назад +11

    So engineer here, not a structural engineer but mechanical, so related. Is it fixable... yeah. Should you fix it.... ehhhh... how much is the home worth? My biggest question is what the heck is causing it to move like that, that is some major force acting on that foundation, my only guess would be some type of water issue. Cracks in the foundation, people freak out about it but as we say in engineering concrete is guaranteed to do three things "Crack, Break, and Flake" so a crack isn't usually an issue, however, that is a shifted foundation which is a really big issue. Will it fall down right now... probably not, however if it shifts anymore it could become a problem. Is it worth buying? No, unless you're willing to pay some good money to fix that. If I were going to fix it (I probably have the skills to fix it since I know how forces work) first step would be figuring out what the heck is doing this so you can prevent it. My guess is that the home may have had a better slope next to it, but the neighbor when they extended the driveway may have helped further the issue, typically there is a distance you have to stay away from a property boundary for this reason, but that shouldn't have been enough as houses have footings for this reason. So my guess is the neighbor put in a new driveway and never put in a proper retaining wall, however, it should have just taken out a wall not the whole foundation, so my guess is there is another issue there too. What is very well could be is the soil at this location is not good for this type of foundation, but you would need a soil sample to tell.
    If you did fix it, assuming you did, you would basically (assuming the concrete pad on the ground is flat and thick enough. Transfer the load to the concrete pad in the basement by building some supporting walls, and removing some of the siding near the foundation, then after you have moved the load to the new wall you would need to jack the home up until it was level again (this would be done with the new temporary walls), and tear out the old foundation walls, dig down to the footings and replace those too, or if they are okay anchor the new foundation to them (I would just replace them though since I could be sure if they were done correctly the first time. Build a new concrete footing/foundation (with rebar, I don't this home had it) wich would require new concrete forms and would be quite expensive, set the home back down onto the new foundation, fix the concrete pad (the edges would be damaged), and then remove the temporary walls allowing the home to accept the new foundation, the home will inevitably crack in this process so you will have to repair the walls upstairs, but it should be good after that. If the concrete pad though was not level or thick enough... it could get very complicated. Impossible no, very difficult and expensive VERY. It probably would be like 30-50% of the price of the house. Now if it's in a good neighborhood with good land value, it might be worth it, but in a low-income or less desired area, would probably be more affordable to tear it down and just put in a new home.
    Recommended product for you to test floor flatness with, get a ball, it will always roll to the lowest spot. Could help really show it on the video. Just get a tennis ball or something like that.
    With something like this, you would definitely have to have a structural engineer come out and figure out what is going on. Because you can't just tell what's going wrong with something like this with just pictures alone, you would need to take a soil, and concrete sample, measure the lean, check the water drainage on the property, and put in a retaining wall on the neighbor's end. So it would be a lot of work. I would never recommend that to anyone. Foundations are the worst thing to have go wrong in a home. It can make or break a home.

    • @Inspector_preston
      @Inspector_preston  6 месяцев назад +8

      Yes, I agree with much of what you wrote. I believe it's unstable soil, so this becomes a geotechnical engineer territory. The home is literally moving downhill.

  • @paimond223
    @paimond223 6 месяцев назад +22

    Great video! Once the RUclips algorithm catches up to you, I have a feeling you will be a very popular channel. Keep up the great work. This video is a perfect format.
    Subscribed.

    • @Sevem7m
      @Sevem7m 6 месяцев назад +2

      algorithm is sleeping in this one.. although it did show it to me so def working in some way

    • @Inspector_preston
      @Inspector_preston  5 месяцев назад

      🙏😊🙏 Thank you for being here!

  • @ShadowsandCityLights
    @ShadowsandCityLights 6 месяцев назад +7

    Several videos in and I'm hooked. Interesting stuff, wish I could come along like an apprentice to learn all these things in person.

  • @Nobody12409
    @Nobody12409 6 месяцев назад +6

    I could see the gas meter and piping slanted as well. How long before that starts leaking? Scary...

    • @drozcompany4132
      @drozcompany4132 2 дня назад

      It's weird the meter is inside the dwelling. How do they read it? Do they come in or is it some kind of electronic reading?

  • @singularityscan
    @singularityscan Месяц назад +1

    I Love these longer Video's please make e'm all like this!

  • @ncooty
    @ncooty 5 месяцев назад +2

    Nice to hear that about the buyer's agent. Integrity matters.

  • @WastedTalent-
    @WastedTalent- 2 месяца назад +2

    The pile of rubble was a dead giveaway. How do you leave things like that around when you're trying to sell a house?

  • @marksfreeyoutube6159
    @marksfreeyoutube6159 5 месяцев назад +2

    Great inspection as usual

  • @JohnHill-qo3hb
    @JohnHill-qo3hb 5 месяцев назад +1

    There's inspectors and then there's inspectors, some just fill out the form to get the money, the good ones like to sleep at night. Well done IP, well done.

  • @DAMusic-qu2ec
    @DAMusic-qu2ec 3 месяца назад +1

    Hey guy, I subscribed. I’m learning a lot from your videos. It’s good to know there are people like yourself who care about what they do.

  • @user-yq6xj1xo2b
    @user-yq6xj1xo2b 48 минут назад

    outstanding call the county or city to get that place condemned to save a life

  • @REXOB9
    @REXOB9 5 месяцев назад +1

    Can't be sure from the video, but looks like poison ivy in the front yard - just the frosting on the cake for this gem.

  • @samuelt5131
    @samuelt5131 6 месяцев назад +1

    I didn't really need to watch your video.
    I worked as a carpenter for 35+years, and also in an architectural design firm for several years, and all I needed was to see the outside of that house, and where it was located, and I could tell it was a total disaster.
    You were brave to go into that basement. That house was probably moving while you were in there.
    Crazy!

  • @lostsith
    @lostsith 5 месяцев назад +1

    We had a terrible I section on our current house, willfully ignored a lot. Love watching good people work.

  • @devildogsmom1
    @devildogsmom1 6 месяцев назад +2

    Every time I watch these videos I learn more and more.

  • @claireconley8522
    @claireconley8522 4 месяца назад +1

    That is just plainly scary! How is that allowed? What recourse would the buyer have?

  • @jonviall5566
    @jonviall5566 Месяц назад

    How fun is your show?
    Informative content creators like you make You Tube Awesome!
    Thank you for taking the time to produce.

  • @kennythompson5395
    @kennythompson5395 5 месяцев назад +1

    I believe from the videos I've watched you are therow and honest keep up the great work

  • @FrancisBeanBlades
    @FrancisBeanBlades 6 месяцев назад +3

    I''m in the middle of deciding whether to buy one with what I considered to be serious structural issues right now (the structural engineering estimate was only $7.7K not counting re-pointing). This one made me want to tell you to get out before it fell on you!

  • @georgewengler5396
    @georgewengler5396 6 месяцев назад +1

    "inspectors" that ignore such gross defects should be held accountable and run out of the business. Obviously that inspector was just taking money and telling the customer what they wanted to hear...

  • @lorimiller623
    @lorimiller623 6 месяцев назад +1

    0:52 Look at the size of the vegetation growing out of the neighbor's gutter!

  • @Sevem7m
    @Sevem7m 6 месяцев назад +2

    love me some late night home inspections

  • @felixgarcia8102
    @felixgarcia8102 6 месяцев назад +3

    Well done! Thanks

  • @tracytolman6547
    @tracytolman6547 3 месяца назад

    I've learned so much from your videos!

  • @mrsmith5114
    @mrsmith5114 2 месяца назад

    Hope to see follow up videos if you are ever updated on the information. Crazyness on this video.

  • @johnathonnichols
    @johnathonnichols 6 месяцев назад +4

    I saw those dog treats in your car. Good man.

  • @paulmoffat9306
    @paulmoffat9306 6 месяцев назад +1

    "Caveat Emptor" clearly applies here. Also, I notice all those items leaning against the foundation to mask the defects.

  • @barrieracc7634
    @barrieracc7634 3 месяца назад +1

    Kind of messed up that the nieghbors driveway is causing this house too fall over.

  • @skipjenn
    @skipjenn 3 месяца назад

    Love the videos. Just subscribed !
    I did appraisals for a few years and my wife recently worked for Codes. She saw all the crap the builders and flippers were doing and being allowed to get away with by the inspectors and director. She ended up leaving because it was so horrible watching people get away with crap work( with and without permits ) and being told not to worry about it.
    Keep up the videos !

  • @duotronic6451
    @duotronic6451 6 месяцев назад +1

    Possible collapse onto the downhill driveway? Does that happen in NY? We see that on the west coast after significant rain events. ❤❤❤

  • @thehoosiercraftsmanworksho1745
    @thehoosiercraftsmanworksho1745 5 месяцев назад +2

    In about 5 to 10 years that house will be condemned. A good couple of rains and that foundation is gone !

  • @johnnybgoode3.14
    @johnnybgoode3.14 6 месяцев назад

    Really liked the breakdown on this. I hope the other inspector sees this and uses it as an opportunity to learn more and be better. I'm not an engineer but based on what I saw I would bet you a million dollars that the settlement is current and very active. You don't have flakes of that size fall off a newly parged wall without it being in an active state of settlement. That neighbor is going to have an absolute mess on their hands when that collapses. The side of the hill and that foundation wall need immediate remediation. The house may even be condemnable.

  • @kidchild3183
    @kidchild3183 6 месяцев назад

    Crazy! Would be hard pressed to let my client put an offer in on something like that. Had a similar situation in Cicero that we walked away from. Most beautiful parhe work and cut drains I'd seen but the slope from waist high up made you dizzy to look at it! Keep up the good work Preston!

  • @TheCobruhAlienat0r
    @TheCobruhAlienat0r 5 месяцев назад

    I feel like this is something you should warn the neighbors about cause I'd be afraid the house would slide over into their living room or at least into their drive way.

  • @joetuktyyuktuk8635
    @joetuktyyuktuk8635 2 месяца назад

    It looks to me the house would prefer being situated on the neighboring lot and is doing all it can to move itself over there...

  • @Naademai
    @Naademai 5 месяцев назад

    All these problems, the whole home being at risk, just because they didn’t build a retaining wall when they built it or when they built the neighbors home if it was built later

  • @Estwing22
    @Estwing22 6 месяцев назад +2

    The first inspector's price was for a rubber stamp which a sellers agent would jump on if integrity to them was just a meaningless word, because if the ends justify the means then there are no rules but to make your sale at all costs. Then push those costs onto the buyer. But make sure you get your commission first. Integrity in the real estate industry where a buyers agent makes a percentage off the sale price is conflicted. Why would any agent making a percentage work to get the price down for their client when it will lessen their pay? Its stupidity to think that the buyers agent isnt working for the seller because they will work to make the most money for themselves. At the expense of the buyer. Its a grift by a grifters industry. The job they do these days could be accomplished with an app and a qualified home inspector at a lot less than 6%.
    Grifters.

  • @donnahall7014
    @donnahall7014 2 месяца назад

    now that is scary,

  • @susanleonard3975
    @susanleonard3975 6 месяцев назад +2

    And is that poison ivy all over that embankment? That would be an enormous bunch of nope from me.

  • @jimmyfavereau
    @jimmyfavereau 2 месяца назад

    Love ya Bro! Gold!

  • @niteninja0133
    @niteninja0133 5 месяцев назад

    Just found this channel, absolutely love it. It's crazy the kind of stuff you find and people of flipper homes are like yeah that looks good

  • @Dancing_Foxes
    @Dancing_Foxes 5 месяцев назад

    My husband bought a fixer upper house that ended up having structural damage to the foundation. We got a structural engineer to come in and fix it. 2 years later everything is still looking good, no new cracks, nothing is leaning, nothing like that. It was originally caused by bad gutters pooling all the water into the front left corner of the house. After everything was fixed I feel that the house is tilted towards the front left of the home. Other people who go into the house say they don't see/feel that. I am 100% sure if I would bring in an inspector he would say there is.
    My question is if their is a tilt to the house even though all the foundational issues are fixed what would that do if we wanted to sell the house?

  • @troisquarts3659
    @troisquarts3659 6 месяцев назад

    I think I get the point: the displacement is not insignificant. In fact, it is often significant.

    • @Inspector_preston
      @Inspector_preston  6 месяцев назад +1

      Well, the significant displacement is not insignificant. It's significance is significant, and not in significant.

  • @Papierdog
    @Papierdog 6 месяцев назад +1

    We have a small horizontal crack in the basement that has definitely widened recently. Who do I look for that will fix it correctly? Thanks for taking us along.

    • @Inspector_preston
      @Inspector_preston  6 месяцев назад +3

      Horizontal cracks tend to be more severe conditions. I would contact a very reputable foundation contractor or structural engineer.

    • @Papierdog
      @Papierdog 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@Inspector_preston Thank you for the advice. We have a structural engineer coming this Friday.

  • @huejanus5505
    @huejanus5505 6 месяцев назад +2

    It’s the other inspector who gives you guys a bad name. I’m not an inspector or a structural engineer but i can see that there’s significant problems there.

  • @spcysos
    @spcysos 6 месяцев назад

    Great info in all of your videos! I really enjoy watching them. Keep them coming! Good job on being a true professional and keeping things real! Everyone needs the reality of the situation and to decide how to proceed accordingly. Buying a house without inspection is a scam! My inspection guy was very considerate and helpful as well and pointed out all of the issues in my house prior to buying even stating things that he could not see without digging further. We were able to negotiate based on the findings. This is how the process should go!

  • @jimdarhower4945
    @jimdarhower4945 2 месяца назад

    All that “displacement” just looks like the secondary buildup on top of the walls no?

  • @sebotuna6230
    @sebotuna6230 5 месяцев назад +1

    Great video
    Got my sub

  • @1ajs
    @1ajs 6 месяцев назад +4

    cinderblock foundations should be banned

    • @hotpuppy1
      @hotpuppy1 6 месяцев назад +1

      Poured concrete isn't any better if done wrong>>they will crack too.

    • @jf6466work
      @jf6466work 6 месяцев назад +1

      Doesn't matter is it's cinderblock or poured concrete if the grading is poor. Ironically cinderblock is easier to repair if done correctly.

    • @peterpan4038
      @peterpan4038 5 месяцев назад

      Doesn't matter what type of foundation material you use, if someone f's it up: shit is bound to go south.
      And vice versa, even subpar materials can last for hundreds of years if construction and maintenance is done the right way.

    • @iworkout6912
      @iworkout6912 5 месяцев назад

      My house is elevated up from the street. So water runs down into the curb and into the town drains. My nephew bought a house that its just the opposite, Water runs down from the street and right into his foundation. Same contractor who had the driveway paved right on top of the lawn, no underlayer, no nothing. It all fell apart in just a few years. Suppose to be a top builder in southern PA. Out of business now. Probably still around under a new name.

  • @J55S
    @J55S 5 месяцев назад

    I bet they had some stuff roll into the vent under the end of that bookcase you see when you opened the front door .

  • @James-ol6rw
    @James-ol6rw 5 месяцев назад

    Could this wall be stabilized with steel rams driven down and under the wall? Ramjack might permanently stabilize this, right?

  • @TT-hm9uc
    @TT-hm9uc 6 месяцев назад +1

    Great vids . I wish more inexperienced buyers would watch these . As a house flipper here in the south there are certain houses that we don’t touch . One is basemen homes or homes with tall crawl space on elevated foundations . Always some sort of water intrusion foundation issue . Run away . Even the older homes , turn of the century are starting to become just to costly to fix .

  • @rezinatebasshead
    @rezinatebasshead 6 месяцев назад +1

    "that right there is NOT insignificant"

  • @gnomiefirst9201
    @gnomiefirst9201 6 месяцев назад

    You're not an alarmist, you're a realist. With a background in construction I started to study home inspection. I talked with an inspector who told me he writes everything up that could be potentially wrong so he won't be held liable. Not that it is wrong, but could potentially be wrong. I decided I didn't want to get involved with inspection bc of the huge amounts of money involved in real estate and the shady aspects surrounding real estate transactions. One reason is it would be illegal for me to tell the potential buyer, you don't want to buy this home bc it is a POS. Another is that an area that is not accessible cannot be accessed by damaging property, even if it's just plastic e.g. tearing off plastic covering a faulty foundation. But the biggest pill to swallow is Banks giving loans on homes that are a POS, and a lot of them are new homes in Big developments $$$$$ (red flag). The banks have their own appraisers and give the loan on a POS based on the appraisal (over inflated). How is this even legal? Big Money always brings out the worst in people. Just put some parging and paint on it, right?

  • @lilacscentedfushias1852
    @lilacscentedfushias1852 6 месяцев назад

    6:50 that’s almost a cm/9.3mm difference, that’s shocking! Did the previous inspector have a sight problem? Or a blindfold?

  • @jamesmendini
    @jamesmendini 6 месяцев назад

    Not sure what the buyers where thinking, but I wouldn't even consider putting in an offer on that house. One look at that basement foundation and it would have me running from this home. Don't even need to hire an inspector pretty obvious problems.

  • @tombarone5657
    @tombarone5657 6 месяцев назад

    OMG that house is going to end up in the neighbors driveway in the not to distant future

  • @peggybuetow1026
    @peggybuetow1026 6 месяцев назад

    Looks like my basement. But no money for repairs. What’s a senior to do? I loathe apartment living.

  • @devdhamija7585
    @devdhamija7585 5 месяцев назад

    Are you afraid it will collapse during your inspection, while you are in the basement?

  • @garycarpenter2932
    @garycarpenter2932 6 месяцев назад

    bring a tennis bal to check level, see how fast it rolls.

  • @BenKlassen1
    @BenKlassen1 5 месяцев назад

    This house needs to be condemned.

  • @ytucharliesierra
    @ytucharliesierra 6 месяцев назад +1

    Not a catastrophy? This house is doomed.

  • @kevincornell1439
    @kevincornell1439 6 месяцев назад

    there's 2 types of inspectors, those that you hire and those that you buy.

  • @bill90405
    @bill90405 4 месяца назад

    Looks like post-earthquake damage.

  • @peggybuetow1026
    @peggybuetow1026 6 месяцев назад

    So what’s the fix?

  • @danneilson684
    @danneilson684 5 месяцев назад

    NEVER TRUST THE SELLERS INSPECTION!!

  • @StevenAbbott
    @StevenAbbott 6 месяцев назад

    That basement wall looks strange is that a stone or CMU foundation with a parge coat.

    • @Inspector_preston
      @Inspector_preston  6 месяцев назад +1

      Concrete with a ton of horrible patches and parging..

  • @bettysmith4527
    @bettysmith4527 6 месяцев назад

    Yikes!! How much to fix that, and would they have to lift the house and redo the whole foundation?

    • @Tindog81476
      @Tindog81476 6 месяцев назад +2

      Not sure about Post-Covid prices now (probably higher now), but depending on the extent of the damage it could be $30K-$120K easily. It could easily cost up to around a 1/3 the price of the house. Concrete is not cheap, and neither is labor. This project requires a lot of both, to both remove the old foundation and put in a new one, without damaging the house any more than it is... it's a lot of work, doable, but probably only worth it if the house value is worth it.

    • @jamesmendini
      @jamesmendini 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@Tindog81476I was thinking about 100k also

  • @norcalsvt0354
    @norcalsvt0354 6 месяцев назад

    100k should fix that issue

  • @henkbarnard1553
    @henkbarnard1553 5 месяцев назад

    12:17 100$ Gogles

  • @Unfluencer
    @Unfluencer 6 месяцев назад

    thats a scrape.

  • @knurlgnar24
    @knurlgnar24 6 месяцев назад

    Always look at who is paying. A seller's inspector is paid to find no faults. A buyer's inspector is paid to find faults even when there is none. It's not a matter of integrity, it's a problem of motivation. Even good people will justify evil if it benefits them. No one is immune to this.

    • @Inspector_preston
      @Inspector_preston  6 месяцев назад +3

      I offer a brand new service I call WaiveWorthy inspections where I do a pre-listing inspection and I keep custody of the report (no no one can edit it) and I record the ENTIRE inspection and provide a video for potential buyers.

  • @user-ho8bs4kd9v
    @user-ho8bs4kd9v 3 месяца назад

    That place is a dangerous dump

  • @WxMan18
    @WxMan18 6 месяцев назад

    Yeah just 'fix' the issues right when ya sell it

  • @GoldenLegionHoney
    @GoldenLegionHoney 6 месяцев назад +1

    i dont wanna leave a comment! .... damnit it worked

  • @bubbleboy821
    @bubbleboy821 6 месяцев назад +1

    NAME DROP THE INSPECTOR, their license should be revoked.

    • @Inspector_preston
      @Inspector_preston  6 месяцев назад +2

      I considered it. The EXACT same situation happened again today with the exact same inspector. But my lawyer says I can't reveal who it is without risking a lawsuit.

  • @magchicago100
    @magchicago100 6 месяцев назад

    Your surprised a homeowner and realtor lies through their teeth?

  • @patty109109
    @patty109109 6 месяцев назад

    Does your inspection report get attached to the house in some way or can they just find another sucker to buy the house?
    It’s likely years before catastrophe, but somebody is going to need to come up with a five digit lump of money to fix this.

    • @paimond223
      @paimond223 6 месяцев назад

      They don't get attached to a house, per se

  • @matthewronson5218
    @matthewronson5218 6 месяцев назад

    How does one go about selecting a competent, comprehensive home inspector, and not one of those clowns that show up and check off on obvious to very serious deficiencies?

    • @Inspector_preston
      @Inspector_preston  6 месяцев назад +4

      We're launching PrestonsList.com this weekend! For exactly that reason!

  • @Darjan_Spasojevic
    @Darjan_Spasojevic 5 месяцев назад

    Customer's put their trust and futures in the inspectors judgement. Guys, do your job properly. No matter if you work fast food or a surgeon. Do your best.