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shel90

Love Makes the World Go Round
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Has anyone experienced cracks in the foundation walls of your homes? We discovered three cracks and the basement got flooded a little bit yesterday after 4 straight days of steady and heavy rains. I did some research and I guess that is a common problem with older houses and can be solved in 2 ways..the temporary way or the permanment way. If u have had that happened to do, which method did u use and were they costly?

I am worried cuz we are tight with money since purchasing this home and Xmas is coming up. My husband called the insurance company but I doubt they will cover this problem. :ohno:
 
Yeah Guess you need hydrophobic polyurethane foams.. must with repel water! :)



Polyurethane Foam Grout, Water Stop Grout, Waterstop, Injection Grout, Injection Foam, Water Stopper, Crack Injection Foam


I think its may have "Gun glue" for your crack foundation wall ;) So You husband can do it!

BUT Wait till your foundation become dry then go ahead Gun glue it ok!!

Good Luck ;)

Ok thanks! This is all new to me cuz I grew up in AZ...most houses in AZ dont have basements. :)
 
Have you had the house checked out by a certifcated inspector before you buy the house?
 
Have you had the house checked out by a certifcated inspector before you buy the house?

Oh yea...twice. One hired by us and one from the VA loan dept and both approved of the house as in good condition. For an 80 year old house, it is in great condition. Everything is practically new (less than 10 years old) except for the windows and the foundation...not too bad.

The cracks happened during the rainstorms. My hubby heard 3 loud bangs in the last 4 days. The cracks werent there when we bought it.

My husband said that is a risk we took when buying an older house. The roof did not leak at all....whew! It is new anyway..lol.
 
aww i hope u will get it fixed soon! this is not good!

Got an email from my friend's brother who is a licensed contractor..he said I can do the cheap way but still have the problems or do it the expensive way but solve the problems forever...depends on how much it costs and if insurance will cover it. My hubby may have to borrow from his retirement funds...:eek3:
 
Its really nothing! and you can't do anything with that foundation with small cracks but How big crack you have? .. If its tiny cracks then just glue it ok Its common all those houses! ok don't spend expensive or loan too! ;) I have exp. with own three homeowner and one of them really bad foundation and I did fixed it.. no problem! :)
 
Ok thanks! This is all new to me cuz I grew up in AZ...most houses in AZ dont have basements. :)

Yeah I undy! ;) I was lived in California and Most of them don't have basements too! :)
 
Shel: I know nothing about basements. But my dad loves "This Old House" on TV and he suggests reading about basements first before paying anyone:

From Ask This Old House: Drying Out a Wet Basement (6 pages) One part says "A pro cure can cost from a few hundred dollars to many thousand. But even if you're knee-deep in water, don't call your banker yet. You can solve most wet-basement problems yourself for significantly less than you'd pay a professional. The key is to determine which of the three major problems you have: condensation, runoff, or subsurface seepage. " It explains more.
 
Its really nothing! and you can't do anything with that foundation with small cracks but How big crack you have? .. If its tiny cracks then just glue it ok Its common all those houses! ok don't spend expensive or loan too! ;) I have exp. with own three homeowner and one of them really bad foundation and I did fixed it.. no problem! :)

:ty:

Yea, the cracks are very small but longggggg! The insurance company called and said we must pick one of the 3 companies they referred us to. I am hoping that means the damage is covered. I am waiting for my husband to come home from his weekend job so we can discuss this. The basement is dry now..spent the day drying it. Now I am sore!!! LOL!
 
Shel: I know nothing about basements. But my dad loves "This Old House" on TV and he suggests reading about basements first before paying anyone:

From Ask This Old House: Drying Out a Wet Basement (6 pages) One part says "A pro cure can cost from a few hundred dollars to many thousand. But even if you're knee-deep in water, don't call your banker yet. You can solve most wet-basement problems yourself for significantly less than you'd pay a professional. The key is to determine which of the three major problems you have: condensation, runoff, or subsurface seepage. " It explains more.

Great!!! Many thanks!
 
:ty:

Yea, the cracks are very small but longggggg! The insurance company called and said we must pick one of the 3 companies they referred us to. I am hoping that means the damage is covered. I am waiting for my husband to come home from his weekend job so we can discuss this. The basement is dry now..spent the day drying it. Now I am sore!!! LOL!

Smile.. I want you aware about Increase insurance...


If you prefer your insurance pay for it and Will increase insurnace with your mortgage... Ask your insurance for informations and see what they say?? :dunno2:

Good Luck! ;)
 
They cant increase the insurance unless they send them a bill. Unless she have a fix rated mortgage. Unless she get the warrenty for the house like I did and gotta call them. It have been 3 weeks since I called them. GRRRRRRRRRRr at them.
 
Smile.. I want you aware about Increase insurance...


If you prefer your insurance pay for it and Will increase insurnace with your mortgage... Ask your insurance for informations and see what they say?? :dunno2:

Good Luck! ;)

I am talking with my agent..she is going to investigate for me if those cracks were old and if the sellers and their agent knew about it. If so, that would be called a latent defect.

My coworker warned me about the insurance rates going up if we have the insurance pay for it. The insurance agent wants to come and inspect it so we have to set up a date.

See what happens...
 
latent defect

Latent defect
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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In the law of the sale of property (both real estate and personal property or chattels) a latent defect is a fault in the property that could not have been discovered by a reasonably thorough inspection before the sale.

The general law of the sale of property is caveat emptor (let the buyer beware) and buyers are under a general duty to inspect their purchase before taking possession. However, it is understood at law that inspection is not often sufficient to detect certain deficiencies in the product that can only be discovered through destructive testing or other means that a seller could not reasonably be expected to allow under normal conditions. For example, wood beams and interior brickwork often cannot be fully assessed without destructive testing, and it would be unreasonable for the seller to allow the buyer to take apart a car's engine.

As such, the law expects that buyers will protect themselves in the sales contract against defects they cannot possibly be expected to assess prior to purchase. As such, the term "latent defect" is often used as part of the guarantee clauses in a sales contract so that the buyer can recover damages from the seller if defects turn up in the property after the sale. For example, the seller may be required to pay for repairs of any such damage.

There is no automatic right for a buyer to claim against a seller for such latent defects when they are discovered, absent an agreement in contract. However, if a latent defect is discovered, there is often a presumption against the seller when a claim is made in misrepresentation that the seller knew about the latent defect. As such, the seller is required to show that he or she could not possibly have known of the defect, rather than the buyer having to show that the seller did know about the defect. However, if it can be shown the seller could not have known about the defect (and was not wilfully blind to the possibility) then the buyer's claim will not succeed.

However, when the defect could have been discovered by the buyer by a thorough inspection (a "patent defect"), the buyer cannot possibly succeed in a claim against the seller unless the seller actively took steps to hide the defect from a normal inspection.

In all cases, where a seller actively misrepresents the condition of the property, such as by taking steps to make an inspection impossible or by lying about problems when directly asked, the buyer will almost always succeed unless it can be shown that the buyer was independently aware of the defect and completed the transaction nevertheless.


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