So, Our House Inspection Flooded Our Basement.
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Is this the first offer that you have received?
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@lufins-dad said in So, Our House Inspection Flooded Our Basement.:
Is this the first offer that you have received?
Yeah. After 70+ showings. So hopes are not high.
Nothing wrong with our place, it's just not like the rest of the market in this area, which right now consists of townhomes.
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@aqua-letifer said in So, Our House Inspection Flooded Our Basement.:
@lufins-dad said in So, Our House Inspection Flooded Our Basement.:
Is this the first offer that you have received?
Yeah. After 70+ showings. So hopes are not high.
Nothing wrong with our place, it's just not like the rest of the market in this area, which right now consists of townhomes.
I would think that would make your home more in demand…
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@lufins-dad said in So, Our House Inspection Flooded Our Basement.:
@aqua-letifer said in So, Our House Inspection Flooded Our Basement.:
@lufins-dad said in So, Our House Inspection Flooded Our Basement.:
Is this the first offer that you have received?
Yeah. After 70+ showings. So hopes are not high.
Nothing wrong with our place, it's just not like the rest of the market in this area, which right now consists of townhomes.
I would think that would make your home more in demand…
That puzzled me for years
The homes in my old neighborhood had 3,000+ sq ft, maybe .75 acres and cost around $800K
Just a few blocks away people were paying $700-750K for a townhome with 2,500 sq ft, 2 parking places and no privacy and no land.
What the heck?
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@aqua-letifer said in So, Our House Inspection Flooded Our Basement.:
Our real estate agent, too, is actually siding with the inspector and other agents.
That is weird. Seems like she is "working" for the wrong side.
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Sorry for your travails, @Aqua-Letifer.
Hope you get a good resolution and a good offer soon. -
@aqua-letifer said in So, Our House Inspection Flooded Our Basement.:
We're being cool, but collecting information, and we will be raining down a world of shit about this if we have to.
The best path, prepare as much in the information armory as you can, but also hope the existing transaction can proceed. Also, I'm not sure what the cost is to repair but consider the bigger picture of the sale of the house in case that trumps what is/isn't fair regarding the pipe situation.
Also, @jon-nyc and @Mik please bookmark this thread so we can reference it later when Aqua discusses his chili recipes.
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@89th said in So, Our House Inspection Flooded Our Basement.:
@aqua-letifer said in So, Our House Inspection Flooded Our Basement.:
We're being cool, but collecting information, and we will be raining down a world of shit about this if we have to.
The best path, prepare as much in the information armory as you can, but also hope the existing transaction can proceed. Also, I'm not sure what the cost is to repair but consider the bigger picture of the sale of the house in case that trumps what is/isn't fair regarding the pipe situation.
Also, @jon-nyc and @Mik please bookmark this thread so we can reference it later when Aqua discusses his chili recipes.
Thing is, buyers are gonna bail. I'd bet quite a bit on that. Buyer was pissed when he drove off. I thought he was gonna hit something. Our realtor is delusional.
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I'm not understanding some parts of this. You use the word "septic".... do you have a septic tank setup, or are you connected to a city sewer? If you're connected to a city sewer line, there's supposed to be a "backcheck valve" built into the sewer line outside your house and in the pipe underground. This is to stop sewage from coming INTO your house. It allows the sewage to get out of the house, but closes the pipe off inside to any liquid coming toward the house.
Sewage oing through your pipes only happens when you flush a toilet, run a shower, a sink, etc. But you say none of you were home, so there's no reason for sewage to be going through the pipe anyway. Second, if one of the people inspecting your house used a toilet that's not enough liquid to cause sewage to be all over the floor, even if the pipe had a chunk missing.
A crack you had to look for, not matter the size of the crack, those people in your house couldn't possibly run enough water or flush enough toilets to cause this. So my guess is that you're on a city sewer line, and either the backcheck in the line failed (which is the city's responsibility) or there isn't one in the line, in which case you've just been lucky until now. But you used the word septic... although everything else points to you being connected to the utility company's sewer system.
Second... what material is the pipe made of, and why is it exposed in the first place? Depending on the age of the house, it would either be cast iron, or PVC (plastic) pipe. If it's PVC, why is it exposed? Is the crack in a straight pipe section, or in an elbow, or did a pipe joint fail?
I'm just not getting a clear enough picture of the situation - but it sounds to me like what has happened is the city sewer system backed up in the lines and your backcheck failed.
But I could possibly not be understanding what you're talking about at all..
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I'm not understanding some parts of this. You use the word "septic".... do you have a septic tank setup, or are you connected to a city sewer? If you're connected to a city sewer line, there's supposed to be a "backcheck valve" built into the sewer line outside your house and in the pipe underground. This is to stop sewage from coming INTO your house. It allows the sewage to get out of the house, but closes the pipe off inside to any liquid coming toward the house.
Sorry, yes: it’s the wastewater pipe. Takes the discharges from the toilets and sinks.
Sewage oing through your pipes only happens when you flush a toilet, run a shower, a sink, etc. But you say none of you were home, so there's no reason for sewage to be going through the pipe anyway.
It was during an inspection of the house. They test the system by flushing the toilets and running the sinks.
Second, if one of the people inspecting your house used a toilet that's not enough liquid to cause sewage to be all over the floor, even if the pipe had a chunk missing.
Correct. The crack itself didn’t happen because they flushed a toilet. But now, because of the crack, a flushed toilet leads to water in the basement.
A crack you had to look for, not matter the size of the crack, those people in your house couldn't possibly run enough water or flush enough toilets to cause this.
Correct. There’s this weird junction in the line that’s right at the foot of the steps. What I’m saying is that some jackass stood or sat on that junction. The crack in the line, and the placement of the crack, fits this exactly.
Second... what material is the pipe made of, and why is it exposed in the first place? Depending on the age of the house, it would either be cast iron, or PVC (plastic) pipe. If it's PVC, why is it exposed? Is the crack in a straight pipe section, or in an elbow, or did a pipe joint fail?
Cast iron. And see above for explanation of the line. I have no idea why it’s set up like this, other than to say it’s a pretty old house and who knows what they were thinking at the time.
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@larry said in So, Our House Inspection Flooded Our Basement.:
Ah. I understand it now.
Yeah, a big part of the problem is that I've lived too close to cities for, well, about 20 years now, so unfortunately I talk stupid about house stuff.
Getting better, but plumbing is still pretty foreign to me.
You can save a lot of money by coating the crack with Flex Seal. The stuff works incredibly well.
Indeed! A buddy of mine's a contractor and suggested the very same. Doing that today as the first measure. Thanks for reading through it; I figured there was no way others here wouldn't know more about something like this than I.
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@89th said in So, Our House Inspection Flooded Our Basement.:
I'm surprised you haven't fired your realtor yet.
Yeah, it's complicated. She's working hard on getting us an as-is offer, knowing this one's likely FUBAR. So we're riding it out until the end of the week. Big question is how she expects us to deal with the pipe after this offer dissolves.
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@aqua-letifer Maybe I missed it, but what is the cost for the repair? I would imagine 750-1500?
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@89th said in So, Our House Inspection Flooded Our Basement.:
@aqua-letifer Maybe I missed it, but what is the cost for the repair? I would imagine 750-1500?
Gonna be something like that, yeah. Plumber is coming tomorrow for an estimate. Definitely going to ask him to list his educated opinion on the cause of the break in the estimate.
And of course this is all preparing for the deal falling through and we're left with a cracked pipe. If something stupid happens and the sale continues for some reason, then fine, whatever.