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The Home Improvement Thread. Successes and Failures

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I installed an RO system for the kitchen. I'm pretty proud of myself.

I only got sprayed in the face with bleach water twice!
 
Yeah, we have a 100+ year old Victorian with hardwood floors, and we've just used pads. However, up until about two years ago it didn't matter because we also had a golden retriever and german shorthair.

Golden retrievers kill hardwood floors, Scratches are one reason, bigger reason is being wet whenever they can and then sprawling out of the floor
 
Annoying feature not considered of new RO system. During refilling periods, the reject water is a constant trickle in the drain.

:-/
 
I don’t have a good suggestion, but definitely stay away from the felt pads, especially for things like dining chairs that you expect to move frequently. The pads won’t stick over time, and if there is anything worse than a floor protected by felt pads, it’s one that you *think* is protected. Ugh - been there.

Gorilla Glue makes some felt pads that have done well for me. They include these little spikes - 3 or 4, depending upon pad diameter - that you tap in lightly with a hammer as well as an adhesive. Otherwise, yes, I’ve had similar issues that you’ve described.
 
I just had my home inspected, confirming what I pretty much figured out on my own earlier this week. The NW corner of my house is sinking. The solution to this is to install galvanized steel pads that rest upon 20-30ft galvanized steel piers that reach down to hard, undisturbed soil. Four of them are needed. Super.
 
I just had my home inspected, confirming what I pretty much figured out on my own earlier this week. The NW corner of my house is sinking. The solution to this is to install galvanized steel pads that rest upon 20-30ft galvanized steel piers that reach down to hard, undisturbed soil. Four of them are needed. Super.

Is your house built on a slab? or do you have a basement? That sounds like an expensive fix. and way more to it than just some pilings driven and somehow connected to some pads.
 
Is your house built on a slab? or do you have a basement? That sounds like an expensive fix. and way more to it than just some pilings driven and somehow connected to some pads.
We have a basement. Most homes in MN have either a basement or 4’ crawl space due to weather safety considerations.

The corner of the house that’s sinking is about 12’ along the front of the house, and then about 5-6’ along the side, which leads to the four piers.

This all happens because of the excavation process of building a home in mostly clay soil. The water will get trapped in the disturbed soil which then expands and contracts under the entire basement, but impacts the footings upon which the basement walls rest as they carry most of the house’s weight.

According to the inspector, the number of houses experiencing this issue have shot way up because of the odd weather patterns these past few years. We’ve had some very dry summers, but then it’s been getting very wet just before the cold weather hits. This all causes the soils to shift more during the winters.

The fix is just shy of $15k, about half of what I had been expecting.
 
Minnesota is in for some rude rude awakenings if this is because of clay. Not super thrilled to be living in a home surrounded by clay.
 
Minnesota is in for some rude rude awakenings if this is because of clay. Not super thrilled to be living in a home surrounded by clay.

The inspector was telling me that the homes built on former sand pits and fields that had been repeatedly tilled over the years have had so many issues that construction companies have started installing these piers at the time of original home construction. The is will mitigate the sinking problems, but there’s only so much they can or are willing to do regarding the water drainage concerns.

The more I think about it, the more I would look for a walkout basement going forward.
 
What kind of inspector?

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"Eh what"? Eh 'mon-key'?"
 
What kind of inspector?
We called foundation companies with good reviews from various orgs, like the BBB, Google, yelp, etc..

I also ran Google searches prior to seeking out companies on what causes these issues I’d been having in my house - brand new entry door going out of alignment after winter came, the ceiling of the basement room in the same corner of the house as said door appearing to separate from the walls, and the appearance of foundation blocks separating on that side of the house, and a crack appearing in the plaster wall by that same entry door.
 
The inspector was telling me that the homes built on former sand pits and fields that had been repeatedly tilled over the years have had so many issues that construction companies have started installing these piers at the time of original home construction. The is will mitigate the sinking problems, but there’s only so much they can or are willing to do regarding the water drainage concerns.

The more I think about it, the more I would look for a walkout basement going forward.

Why would a walkout be any better?
 
We called foundation companies with good reviews from various orgs, like the BBB, Google, yelp, etc..

I also ran Google searches prior to seeking out companies on what causes these issues I’d been having in my house - brand new entry door going out of alignment after winter came, the ceiling of the basement room in the same corner of the house as said door appearing to separate from the walls, and the appearance of foundation blocks separating on that side of the house, and a crack appearing in the plaster wall by that same entry door.

There are a lot of posers out there calling themselves home inspectors, glad you did your homework. Thats a serious issue.
 
Why would a walkout be any better?
I figure that a walkout would allow at least one direction for the water to move rather than all being stuck the “bowl” created when the land is excavated for the foundation. According to the guy who was here, if you dig up clay and put it back in place, even under a house foundation, it takes about 25,000 years for the disturbed ground to become as hard as it had once been. So I’m thinking that the water movement, if it had at least one direction of escape, would help to somehow mitigate water issues. I might be way off on that idea.
 
I figure that a walkout would allow at least one direction for the water to move rather than all being stuck the “bowl” created when the land is excavated for the foundation. According to the guy who was here, if you dig up clay and put it back in place, even under a house foundation, it takes about 25,000 years for the disturbed ground to become as hard as it had once been. So I’m thinking that the water movement, if it had at least one direction of escape, would help to somehow mitigate water issues. I might be way off on that idea.

If the foundation is done right, the soil the footers are on should be undisturbed, the walls are then built on those footers. Compacted gravel between the footers(below cellar floor), drain pipe to daylight if possible inside and outside the footers and then a slab is then poured inside the walls. . Back filling with native clay is done all the time although I wouldn't do it at my home. Frost issues are especially bad in clay, ice lenses can form and push concrete all over the place. Block walls can be pushed in easily by frost(as can poured walls). I googled ice lenses(lens) and got a Minnesota example on first hit. https://inspectapedia.com/Energy/Ice-Lensing-Foundation-Damage.php
 
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