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#1
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If you had roofing work done:
1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. |
#2
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On Jun 11, 6:32�pm, Molly Brown wrote:
If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. did you inspect the chimney and cap from above? in places with freezing weather a cracked cap can let water get between the liner and chimney bricks, the rain water freezes and expands the liner breaks and falls down blocking the flue... it nearly killed my family, a friend happened to stop to visit he is a volunteer fireman and realized the symptoms which began to effect him too was carbon monoxide. the roof had been replaced but the roofer didnt fix the badly detoriated cap |
#3
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Molly Brown wrote:
If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. Thanks for thinking of us, but up here in cold country, almost nobody has recessed lights (heat leaks unless you get the expensive kind or build a box around them), and furnaces are in the frigging basement where they belong. -- aem sends... |
#4
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![]() wrote in message ... On Jun 11, 6:32?pm, Molly Brown wrote: If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. did you inspect the chimney and cap from above? in places with freezing weather a cracked cap can let water get between the liner and chimney bricks, the rain water freezes and expands the liner breaks and falls down blocking the flue... it nearly killed my family, a friend happened to stop to visit he is a volunteer fireman and realized the symptoms which began to effect him too was carbon monoxide. the roof had been replaced but the roofer didnt fix the badly detoriated cap Say what? Using your analogy, if I had my windows replaced, I should be complaining they didn't fix my steps on the deck. Do you not have your heating components checked, and expect anyone NOT qualified to go ahead and just fix stuff? I do believe if a roofer were to fix a HVAC problem, they could be sued, or at least have their license revoked. Does that mean, next time I have a HVAC person in, to complain they didn't clean my gutters? |
#5
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On Fri, 11 Jun 2010 19:51:18 -0400, aemeijers
wrote: Molly Brown wrote: If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. Thanks for thinking of us, but up here in cold country, almost nobody has recessed lights (heat leaks unless you get the expensive kind or build a box around them), and furnaces are in the frigging basement where they belong. well you still have to check it when you put in a new basement floor. |
#6
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Molly Brown wrote:
If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. Huh? Our furnace is in the basement. I have a metal roof which will last more than 50 years. |
#7
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mm wrote:
On Fri, 11 Jun 2010 19:51:18 -0400, wrote: Molly Brown wrote: If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. Thanks for thinking of us, but up here in cold country, almost nobody has recessed lights (heat leaks unless you get the expensive kind or build a box around them), and furnaces are in the frigging basement where they belong. well you still have to check it when you put in a new basement floor. Hi, Of course, whole house shakes. |
#8
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On Jun 11, 5:32*pm, Molly Brown wrote:
If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. Did you check to see rotted wood was replaced, flashing inserted on the chimney not just caulked on, proper grade of nails used. Ive been cheated all the time, you should have gotten a permit and the free inspection, then paid. |
#9
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Tyler wrote:
wrote in message ... On Jun 11, 6:32?pm, Molly Brown wrote: If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. did you inspect the chimney and cap from above? in places with freezing weather a cracked cap can let water get between the liner and chimney bricks, the rain water freezes and expands the liner breaks and falls down blocking the flue... it nearly killed my family, a friend happened to stop to visit he is a volunteer fireman and realized the symptoms which began to effect him too was carbon monoxide. the roof had been replaced but the roofer didnt fix the badly detoriated cap Say what? Using your analogy, if I had my windows replaced, I should be complaining they didn't fix my steps on the deck. Do you not have your heating components checked, and expect anyone NOT qualified to go ahead and just fix stuff? I do believe if a roofer were to fix a HVAC problem, they could be sued, or at least have their license revoked. Does that mean, next time I have a HVAC person in, to complain they didn't clean my gutters? True up to a point- the tradesman should not DO any work outside of his license and skill set, but most tradesmen a generalists to a degree, and they should definitely Speak Up about any problems they note while working on whatever they were hired for. So if the roofer (or more likely, the guy up on the roof doing the estimate) notices problems with the chimney, he should say 'hey while I was up there, I noticed something that you should probably take care of before we strip your roof off.' -- aem sends... |
#10
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Molly Brown wrote:
If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. 3. If your dryer vent exited through the roof, does it still do so after the roofers leave? 4. While we're at it, does the gas water heater vent still vent through the roof? 5. Not connected to the possible fire issue, but do the sewer vents still vent through the roof? |
#11
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![]() "aemeijers" wrote in message ... Tyler wrote: wrote in message ... On Jun 11, 6:32?pm, Molly Brown wrote: If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. did you inspect the chimney and cap from above? in places with freezing weather a cracked cap can let water get between the liner and chimney bricks, the rain water freezes and expands the liner breaks and falls down blocking the flue... it nearly killed my family, a friend happened to stop to visit he is a volunteer fireman and realized the symptoms which began to effect him too was carbon monoxide. the roof had been replaced but the roofer didnt fix the badly detoriated cap Say what? Using your analogy, if I had my windows replaced, I should be complaining they didn't fix my steps on the deck. Do you not have your heating components checked, and expect anyone NOT qualified to go ahead and just fix stuff? I do believe if a roofer were to fix a HVAC problem, they could be sued, or at least have their license revoked. Does that mean, next time I have a HVAC person in, to complain they didn't clean my gutters? True up to a point- the tradesman should not DO any work outside of his license and skill set, but most tradesmen a generalists to a degree, and they should definitely Speak Up about any problems they note while working on whatever they were hired for. So if the roofer (or more likely, the guy up on the roof doing the estimate) notices problems with the chimney, he should say 'hey while I was up there, I noticed something that you should probably take care of before we strip your roof off.' -- aem sends... This _may_ be true, "if" the problem existed b/4 the roof was done. It may also be true "if" they were looking for problems. It would be like blaming a plumber replacing a soil stack, the roof is leaking & they didn't mention the roof was bad. Way too many people don't want to take responsibility as a home owner. If one is not capable of finding problems or potential problems with their home, they should hire a home inspector. Blaming a roofer for _not_ finding a HVAC problem or masonry problem, which _may_ or may _not_ existed, is showing how irresponsible of a homeowner they are. |
#12
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On Jun 11, 7:28*pm, "Tyler" wrote:
"aemeijers" wrote in message ... Tyler wrote: wrote in message .... On Jun 11, 6:32?pm, Molly Brown wrote: If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. did you inspect the chimney and cap from above? in places with freezing weather a cracked cap can let water get between the liner and chimney bricks, the rain water freezes and expands the liner breaks and falls down blocking the flue... it nearly killed my family, a friend happened to stop to visit he is a volunteer fireman and realized the symptoms which began to effect him too was carbon monoxide. the roof had been replaced but the roofer didnt fix the badly detoriated cap Say what? Using your analogy, if I had my windows replaced, I should be complaining they didn't fix my steps on the deck. Do you not have your heating components checked, and expect anyone NOT qualified to go ahead and just fix stuff? I do believe if a roofer were to fix a HVAC problem, they could be sued, or at least have their license revoked. Does that mean, next time I have a HVAC person in, to complain they didn't clean my gutters? True up to a point- the tradesman should not DO any work outside of his license and skill set, but most tradesmen a generalists to a degree, and they should definitely Speak Up about any problems they note while working on whatever they were hired for. So if the roofer (or more likely, the guy up on the roof doing the estimate) notices problems with the chimney, he should say 'hey while I was up there, I noticed something that you should probably take care of before we strip your roof off.' -- aem sends... This _may_ be true, "if" the problem existed b/4 the roof was done. It may also be true "if" they were looking for problems. It would be like blaming a plumber replacing a soil stack, the roof is leaking & they didn't mention the roof was bad. Way too many people don't want to take responsibility as a home owner. If one is not capable of finding problems or potential problems with their home, they should hire a home inspector. Blaming a roofer for _not_ finding a HVAC problem or masonry problem, which _may_ or may _not_ existed, is showing how irresponsible of a homeowner they are.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Tyler wrote: Way too many people don't want to take responsibility as a home owner. If one is not capable of finding problems or potential problems with their home, they should hire a home inspector. Blaming a roofer for _not_ finding a HVAC problem or masonry problem, which _may_ or may _not_ existed, is showing how irresponsible of a homeowner they are. We’re not talking about finding a “HVAC problem”. We’re talking about finding a life threatening hazardous situation. According to your logic if the furnace or water heater vent doesn’t have a bucket where it enters the roof then the roofer shouldn’t be responsible for just roofing around it like the previous roofer did, or I shouldn’t be responsible if I shove your ninety year old grandmother when she gets in front of me on line even if she does drop dead of a heart attack. As for knowing if the problem existed before or not, it is part of the preliminary work site inspection to look UNDER the roof as well as over it; and yes life is a bitch, and then you die. |
#13
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On Fri, 11 Jun 2010 15:32:12 -0700 (PDT), Molly Brown
wrote: If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. Would be kinda difficult with the furnace in the basement - - - - - .. |
#14
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On Fri, 11 Jun 2010 20:30:17 -0400, mm
wrote: On Fri, 11 Jun 2010 19:51:18 -0400, aemeijers wrote: Molly Brown wrote: If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. Thanks for thinking of us, but up here in cold country, almost nobody has recessed lights (heat leaks unless you get the expensive kind or build a box around them), and furnaces are in the frigging basement where they belong. well you still have to check it when you put in a new basement floor. The floor generally outlasts the house built over it. |
#16
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around here the roofer is supposed to inspect the chimney cap when
doing a complete re roof. the roof was replaced in july, the carbon monoxide poisioning in december so it definetely was a problem when the roof was replaced. and since my ladder doesnt reach to the chimney height and i dont like heights to begin with its the roofers job and a pretty easy one at that......... I have replaced chimney caps on other homes since then. Inspect cap if its cracked remove broken masonary, clean area so new cement sticks. Mix new cement and place neatly and finish so its smooth. Mostly the hassle is the inconvenient location....... |
#18
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![]() "Molly Brown" wrote in message ... We’re not talking about finding a “HVAC problem”. We’re talking about finding a life threatening hazardous situation. According to your logic if the furnace or water heater vent doesn’t have a bucket where it enters the roof then the roofer shouldn’t be responsible for just roofing around it like the previous roofer did, or I shouldn’t be responsible if I shove your ninety year old grandmother when she gets in front of me on line even if she does drop dead of a heart attack. As for knowing if the problem existed before or not, it is part of the preliminary work site inspection to look UNDER the roof as well as over it; and yes life is a bitch, and then you die. I see I struck a nerve about being irresponsible. A _responsible_ homeowner would have at least 1 CO detector, a lot of homeowner's have two CO detectors. One shouldn't have to wait for a someone to tell you, the symptoms you have are from CO, then try to blame a contractor, which has nothing to do with it. That is irresponsibility at it's finest. |
#19
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![]() "mm" wrote in message ... On Fri, 11 Jun 2010 22:28:08 -0400, "Tyler" wrote: "aemeijers" wrote in message om... Tyler wrote: wrote in message ... On Jun 11, 6:32?pm, Molly Brown wrote: If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. did you inspect the chimney and cap from above? in places with freezing weather a cracked cap can let water get between the liner and chimney bricks, the rain water freezes and expands the liner breaks and falls down blocking the flue... it nearly killed my family, a friend happened to stop to visit he is a volunteer fireman and realized the symptoms which began to effect him too was carbon monoxide. the roof had been replaced but the roofer didnt fix the badly detoriated cap Say what? Using your analogy, if I had my windows replaced, I should be complaining they didn't fix my steps on the deck. Do you not have your heating components checked, and expect anyone NOT qualified to go ahead and just fix stuff? I do believe if a roofer were to fix a HVAC problem, they could be sued, or at least have their license revoked. Does that mean, next time I have a HVAC person in, to complain they didn't clean my gutters? True up to a point- the tradesman should not DO any work outside of his license and skill set, but most tradesmen a generalists to a degree, and they should definitely Speak Up about any problems they note while working on whatever they were hired for. So if the roofer (or more likely, the guy up on the roof doing the estimate) notices problems with the chimney, he should say 'hey while I was up there, I noticed something that you should probably take care of before we strip your roof off.' -- aem sends... This _may_ be true, "if" the problem existed b/4 the roof was done. It may also be true "if" they were looking for problems. It would be like blaming a plumber replacing a soil stack, the roof is leaking & they didn't mention the roof was bad. Well, if they want repeat customers and referrals, they take the 2 minutes to look at what's up there when they're up there. It's not like the deck and the windows which are easy to look at. It's almost never easy to get up on the roof (unless a window looks out on it), and the older people get the harder it gets. And a sloped roof gets riskier the older one is. That is what home inspectors are for. Aside from that, a responsible homeowner will have CO detectors. Who are you going to blame about _not_ having CO detectors? You don't wait for someone to tell you, the symptoms you have, are from CO poisioning. Sooner or later, people have to take on being a responsible homeowner, whether they like it or not. You can't keep pointing fingers, believing that excuses you from being responsible. |
#20
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On Jun 12, 12:32�pm, "Tyler" wrote:
"mm" wrote in message ... On Fri, 11 Jun 2010 22:28:08 -0400, "Tyler" wrote: "aemeijers" wrote in message om... Tyler wrote: wrote in message ... On Jun 11, 6:32?pm, Molly Brown wrote: If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. did you inspect the chimney and cap from above? in places with freezing weather a cracked cap can let water get between the liner and chimney bricks, the rain water freezes and expands the liner breaks and falls down blocking the flue... it nearly killed my family, a friend happened to stop to visit he is a volunteer fireman and realized the symptoms which began to effect him too was carbon monoxide. the roof had been replaced but the roofer didnt fix the badly detoriated cap Say what? Using your analogy, if I had my windows replaced, I should be complaining they didn't fix my steps on the deck. Do you not have your heating components checked, and expect anyone NOT qualified to go ahead and just fix stuff? I do believe if a roofer were to fix a HVAC problem, they could be sued, or at least have their license revoked. Does that mean, next time I have a HVAC person in, to complain they didn't clean my gutters? True up to a point- the tradesman should not DO any work outside of his license and skill set, but most tradesmen a generalists to a degree, and they should definitely Speak Up about any problems they note while working on whatever they were hired for. So if the roofer (or more likely, the guy up on the roof doing the estimate) notices problems with the chimney, he should say 'hey while I was up there, I noticed something that you should probably take care of before we strip your roof off.' -- aem sends... This _may_ be true, "if" the problem existed b/4 the roof was done. It may also be true "if" they were looking for problems. It would be like blaming a plumber replacing a soil stack, the roof is leaking & they didn't mention the roof was bad. Well, if they want repeat customers and referrals, they take the 2 minutes to look at what's up there when they're up there. �It's not like the deck and the windows which are easy to look at. �It's almost never easy to get up on the roof (unless a window looks out on it), and the older people get the harder it gets. �And a sloped roof gets riskier the older one is. That is what home inspectors are for. Aside from that, a responsible homeowner will have CO detectors. Who are you going to blame about _not_ having CO detectors? You don't wait for someone to tell you, the symptoms you have, are from CO poisioning. Sooner or later, people have to take on being a responsible homeowner, whether they like it or not. You can't keep pointing fingers, believing that excuses you from being responsible.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - at the time this occured CO detectors for homes werent available .......... and the chimey sweep who I had fix it stated clearly it should of been fixed by the roofer |
#21
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On Jun 11, 6:32*pm, Molly Brown wrote:
If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. Umm... If the roofer is only doing work on the outside surface of your roof, then anything that happens inside the attic other than the appearance of a water leak in the new roof isn't the roofer's problem... Making sure your attic is clean inside would only be within the roofer's scope of work if they had to replace the roof decking and had to strip your roof down to the rafters... Otherwise, cleaning up INSIDE your house is your responsibility unless you arrange for your contractor to take care of that extra work for you at an additional expense because you are either unable or unwilling to do it yourself... Saying that a contractor is required to OR SHOULD be checking up on your house on things way outside the scope of their work is crazy... It shows that you really don't know enough about home repairs to do more than ask silly questions on a newsgroup... ~~ Evan |
#22
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On Sat, 12 Jun 2010 12:32:30 -0400, "Tyler" wrote:
"mm" wrote in message .. . On Fri, 11 Jun 2010 22:28:08 -0400, "Tyler" wrote: "aemeijers" wrote in message news:hLCdnez7ZtA_e4_RnZ2dnUVZ_uSdnZ2d@giganews. com... Tyler wrote: wrote in message ... On Jun 11, 6:32?pm, Molly Brown wrote: If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. did you inspect the chimney and cap from above? in places with freezing weather a cracked cap can let water get between the liner and chimney bricks, the rain water freezes and expands the liner breaks and falls down blocking the flue... it nearly killed my family, a friend happened to stop to visit he is a volunteer fireman and realized the symptoms which began to effect him too was carbon monoxide. the roof had been replaced but the roofer didnt fix the badly detoriated cap Say what? Using your analogy, if I had my windows replaced, I should be complaining they didn't fix my steps on the deck. Do you not have your heating components checked, and expect anyone NOT qualified to go ahead and just fix stuff? I do believe if a roofer were to fix a HVAC problem, they could be sued, or at least have their license revoked. Does that mean, next time I have a HVAC person in, to complain they didn't clean my gutters? True up to a point- the tradesman should not DO any work outside of his license and skill set, but most tradesmen a generalists to a degree, and they should definitely Speak Up about any problems they note while working on whatever they were hired for. So if the roofer (or more likely, the guy up on the roof doing the estimate) notices problems with the chimney, he should say 'hey while I was up there, I noticed something that you should probably take care of before we strip your roof off.' -- aem sends... This _may_ be true, "if" the problem existed b/4 the roof was done. It may also be true "if" they were looking for problems. It would be like blaming a plumber replacing a soil stack, the roof is leaking & they didn't mention the roof was bad. Well, if they want repeat customers and referrals, they take the 2 minutes to look at what's up there when they're up there. It's not like the deck and the windows which are easy to look at. It's almost never easy to get up on the roof (unless a window looks out on it), and the older people get the harder it gets. And a sloped roof gets riskier the older one is. That is what home inspectors are for. Aside from that, a responsible homeowner will have CO detectors. Who are you going to blame about _not_ having CO detectors? And I don't put much stock in home inspectors either. Several friends of mine ARE home inspectors - and nothing against them, but I know of others that can make a mountain out of a molehill, and then turn around and miss Mount Everest. You don't wait for someone to tell you, the symptoms you have, are from CO poisioning. Sooner or later, people have to take on being a responsible homeowner, whether they like it or not. You can't keep pointing fingers, believing that excuses you from being responsible. |
#23
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On Sat, 12 Jun 2010 12:28:11 -0700 (PDT), Evan
wrote: On Jun 11, 6:32Â*pm, Molly Brown wrote: If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. Umm... If the roofer is only doing work on the outside surface of your roof, then anything that happens inside the attic other than the appearance of a water leak in the new roof isn't the roofer's problem... Making sure your attic is clean inside would only be within the roofer's scope of work if they had to replace the roof decking and had to strip your roof down to the rafters... Otherwise, cleaning up INSIDE your house is your responsibility unless you arrange for your contractor to take care of that extra work for you at an additional expense because you are either unable or unwilling to do it yourself... Saying that a contractor is required to OR SHOULD be checking up on your house on things way outside the scope of their work is crazy... It shows that you really don't know enough about home repairs to do more than ask silly questions on a newsgroup... ~~ Evan All this is true on a solid roof deck - like plywood or (gasp) OSB - but what about on a roof where the board decking has 1 inch (or more) gaps, like on many of the roofs I've stripped in years and decades past???? |
#24
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On Jun 12, 8:50*pm, wrote:
On Sat, 12 Jun 2010 12:28:11 -0700 (PDT), Evan wrote: On Jun 11, 6:32*pm, Molly Brown wrote: If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. Umm... *If the roofer is only doing work on the outside surface of your roof, then anything that happens inside the attic other than the appearance of a water leak in the new roof isn't the roofer's problem... *Making sure your attic is clean inside would only be within the roofer's scope of work if they had to replace the roof decking and had to strip your roof down to the rafters... *Otherwise, cleaning up INSIDE your house is your responsibility unless you arrange for your contractor to take care of that extra work for you at an additional expense because you are either unable or unwilling to do it yourself... Saying that a contractor is required to OR SHOULD be checking up on your house on things way outside the scope of their work is crazy... It shows that you really don't know enough about home repairs to do more than ask silly questions on a newsgroup... ~~ Evan All this is true on a solid roof deck - like plywood or (gasp) OSB - but what about on a roof where the board decking has 1 inch (or more) gaps, like on many of the roofs I've stripped in years and decades past???? If the roofer did not cut a hole into the roof or go up in the attic to access some aspect of the job, cleaning the attic is not within the scope of the roofing work... Someone who is that anal to want whatever small debris that would fall into the attic from a roofing job to be cleaned up by the contractor doing the roofing work has other issues they need to address which have nothing to do with home repair... BTW, I have only seen some roofs with the gaps in the sheeting which used solid roofing materials like wooden shakes or slate tiles, as asphalt shingles require a solid deck to be used on a roof... ~~ Evan |
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On Sat, 12 Jun 2010 20:13:41 -0700 (PDT), Evan
wrote: On Jun 12, 8:50Â*pm, wrote: On Sat, 12 Jun 2010 12:28:11 -0700 (PDT), Evan wrote: On Jun 11, 6:32Â*pm, Molly Brown wrote: If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. Umm... Â*If the roofer is only doing work on the outside surface of your roof, then anything that happens inside the attic other than the appearance of a water leak in the new roof isn't the roofer's problem... Â*Making sure your attic is clean inside would only be within the roofer's scope of work if they had to replace the roof decking and had to strip your roof down to the rafters... Â*Otherwise, cleaning up INSIDE your house is your responsibility unless you arrange for your contractor to take care of that extra work for you at an additional expense because you are either unable or unwilling to do it yourself... Saying that a contractor is required to OR SHOULD be checking up on your house on things way outside the scope of their work is crazy... It shows that you really don't know enough about home repairs to do more than ask silly questions on a newsgroup... ~~ Evan All this is true on a solid roof deck - like plywood or (gasp) OSB - but what about on a roof where the board decking has 1 inch (or more) gaps, like on many of the roofs I've stripped in years and decades past???? If the roofer did not cut a hole into the roof or go up in the attic to access some aspect of the job, cleaning the attic is not within the scope of the roofing work... Someone who is that anal to want whatever small debris that would fall into the attic from a roofing job to be cleaned up by the contractor doing the roofing work has other issues they need to address which have nothing to do with home repair... BTW, I have only seen some roofs with the gaps in the sheeting which used solid roofing materials like wooden shakes or slate tiles, as asphalt shingles require a solid deck to be used on a roof... ~~ Evan I've removed a fair amount of Cedar over the years, as well as the old interlocking asphalt shingles that were installed on open board sheathing. Then there's the "old" tin shingle, as well as standing seam and corrugated metal. Generally requires laying plywood over the boards for modern 3-tab or architectural shingles. |
#26
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On Sat, 12 Jun 2010 20:13:41 -0700 (PDT), Evan
wrote: On Jun 12, 8:50*pm, wrote: On Sat, 12 Jun 2010 12:28:11 -0700 (PDT), Evan wrote: On Jun 11, 6:32*pm, Molly Brown wrote: If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. Umm... *If the roofer is only doing work on the outside surface of your roof, then anything that happens inside the attic other than the appearance of a water leak in the new roof isn't the roofer's problem... *Making sure your attic is clean inside would only be within the roofer's scope of work if they had to replace the roof decking and had to strip your roof down to the rafters... *Otherwise, cleaning up INSIDE your house is your responsibility unless you arrange for your contractor to take care of that extra work for you at an additional expense because you are either unable or unwilling to do it yourself... Saying that a contractor is required to OR SHOULD be checking up on your house on things way outside the scope of their work is crazy... It shows that you really don't know enough about home repairs to do more than ask silly questions on a newsgroup... ~~ Evan All this is true on a solid roof deck - like plywood or (gasp) OSB - but what about on a roof where the board decking has 1 inch (or more) gaps, like on many of the roofs I've stripped in years and decades past???? If the roofer did not cut a hole into the roof or go up in the attic to access some aspect of the job, cleaning the attic is not within the scope of the roofing work... Someone who is that anal to want whatever small debris that would fall into the attic from a roofing job to be cleaned up by the contractor doing the roofing work has other issues they need to address which have nothing to do with home repair... BTW, I have only seen some roofs with the gaps in the sheeting which used solid roofing materials like wooden shakes or slate tiles, as asphalt shingles require a solid deck to be used on a roof... I've seen shingles used with 1x roof decking. It was quite common up to perhaps fifty years ago. Those houses haven't gone anywhere. |
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#28
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On Jun 12, 12:27*pm, "Tyler" wrote:.
I see I struck a nerve about being irresponsible. A _responsible_ homeowner would have at least 1 CO detector, a lot of homeowner's have two CO detectors. In a total electric home? |
#29
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Ron wrote:
On Jun 12, 12:27 pm, "Tyler" wrote:. I see I struck a nerve about being irresponsible. A _responsible_ homeowner would have at least 1 CO detector, a lot of homeowner's have two CO detectors. In a total electric home? Any females in the house, with the usual curling irons, stinky candles, flat irons, crockpots, ad infinitum? Any fireplaces, gas or wood? Any soldering irons? Ever put up a Christmas tree with old-style light bulbs on it? 'Total electric' does not eliminate the chance of CO problems, it just reduces them. Anything hot near anything that can burn can produce a slow smoldering fire. I need to get one myself, but since I live alone, none of the above apply to me. Furnace and water heater, both gas fired, are my only two plausible ignition points. Just never got a round tuit. -- aem sends... |
#30
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On Jun 13, 7:08*am, aemeijers wrote:
Ron wrote: On Jun 12, 12:27 pm, "Tyler" wrote:. I see I struck a nerve about being irresponsible. A _responsible_ homeowner would have at least 1 CO detector, a lot of homeowner's have two CO detectors. In a total electric home? Any females in the house, with the usual curling irons, stinky candles, flat irons, crockpots, ad infinitum? Any fireplaces, gas or wood? Any soldering irons? Ever put up a Christmas tree with old-style light bulbs on it? *'Total electric' does not eliminate the chance of CO problems, it just reduces them. Anything hot near anything that can burn can produce a slow smoldering fire. I need to get one *myself, but since I live alone, none of the above apply to me. Furnace and water heater, both gas fired, are my only two plausible ignition points. Just never got a round tuit. -- aem sends... I live alone too, and if I die from CO poisoning from a candle or Crock-Pot....then so be it. If I start living with a female again and I die from a curling iron...then so be it. |
#31
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![]() "Ron" wrote in message ... On Jun 12, 12:27 pm, "Tyler" wrote:. I see I struck a nerve about being irresponsible. A _responsible_ homeowner would have at least 1 CO detector, a lot of homeowner's have two CO detectors. In a total electric home? LOL... Well, then they wouldn't have had a problem with the furnace flue in the first place. Would they? |
#32
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![]() wrote in message ... On Jun 12, 12:32?pm, "Tyler" wrote: at the time this occurred CO detectors for homes weren't available .......... and the chimney sweep who I had fix it stated clearly it should of been fixed by the roofer Interesting take. Why would you call a chimney sweep, since you claim it's a roofer's job? |
#33
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No, and no.
However, I don't think that smearing some tar and press on some fiberglass of a trailer will knock the access panels off my furnace. Nor drop dust on my lights. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Molly Brown" wrote in message ... If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. |
#34
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On Sat, 12 Jun 2010 12:32:30 -0400, "Tyler" wrote:
"mm" wrote in message .. . On Fri, 11 Jun 2010 22:28:08 -0400, "Tyler" wrote: "aemeijers" wrote in message news:hLCdnez7ZtA_e4_RnZ2dnUVZ_uSdnZ2d@giganews. com... Tyler wrote: wrote in message ... On Jun 11, 6:32?pm, Molly Brown wrote: If you had roofing work done: 1. Did you check your attic to see if there is debris on the furnace or recessed lighting? 2. Did you check to see if the covers on your furnace did not fall off from the vibration from all the hammering? These are fire hazards that a good roofer should have checked for and a bad roofer may not have at the end of the job. did you inspect the chimney and cap from above? in places with freezing weather a cracked cap can let water get between the liner and chimney bricks, the rain water freezes and expands the liner breaks and falls down blocking the flue... it nearly killed my family, a friend happened to stop to visit he is a volunteer fireman and realized the symptoms which began to effect him too was carbon monoxide. the roof had been replaced but the roofer didnt fix the badly detoriated cap Say what? Using your analogy, if I had my windows replaced, I should be complaining they didn't fix my steps on the deck. Do you not have your heating components checked, and expect anyone NOT qualified to go ahead and just fix stuff? I do believe if a roofer were to fix a HVAC problem, they could be sued, or at least have their license revoked. Does that mean, next time I have a HVAC person in, to complain they didn't clean my gutters? True up to a point- the tradesman should not DO any work outside of his license and skill set, but most tradesmen a generalists to a degree, and they should definitely Speak Up about any problems they note while working on whatever they were hired for. So if the roofer (or more likely, the guy up on the roof doing the estimate) notices problems with the chimney, he should say 'hey while I was up there, I noticed something that you should probably take care of before we strip your roof off.' -- aem sends... This _may_ be true, "if" the problem existed b/4 the roof was done. It may also be true "if" they were looking for problems. It would be like blaming a plumber replacing a soil stack, the roof is leaking & they didn't mention the roof was bad. Well, if they want repeat customers and referrals, they take the 2 minutes to look at what's up there when they're up there. It's not like the deck and the windows which are easy to look at. It's almost never easy to get up on the roof (unless a window looks out on it), and the older people get the harder it gets. And a sloped roof gets riskier the older one is. That is what home inspectors are for. Huh? Things deteriorate over time. How often is a homeowner going to hire a home inspector to inspect the whole home, when almost nothing has changed. Or do they have a special rate for things on the roof? At any rate, how often do you hire a home inspector? The guy is ON the roof already. At the very least, if he knows nothing, he could look at the chimney and say it if is crumbling. Or that the cap is half=way off, if he can't tell it's missing when it's totally missing. Aside from that, a responsible homeowner will have CO detectors. There can be a lot of deterioration before it actually causes CO. Or there could be nothing wrong yet except the missing cap. If the roofer wants his business to grow, he should spend a 2 or 4 hours and find out how to inspect a chimney, etc. That will either set him apart from the average roofer and get him much approval if he notices something important, or if other roofers already know, he won't be looking worse than they anymore. Who are you going to blame about _not_ having CO detectors? I don't look for people to blame. That's your theory about other people. You don't wait for someone to tell you, the symptoms you have, are from CO poisioning. In this case someone had symptoms. In other cases, there is a visible problem on the roof but no symptoms inside the house. Sooner or later, people have to take on being a responsible homeowner, whether they like it or not. You can't keep pointing fingers, believing that excuses you from being responsible. No one is doing that. |
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On Sun, 13 Jun 2010 09:46:11 -0700 (PDT), Ron
wrote: On Jun 13, 7:08*am, aemeijers wrote: Ron wrote: On Jun 12, 12:27 pm, "Tyler" wrote:. I see I struck a nerve about being irresponsible. A _responsible_ homeowner would have at least 1 CO detector, a lot of homeowner's have two CO detectors. In a total electric home? Any females in the house, with the usual curling irons, stinky candles, flat irons, crockpots, ad infinitum? Any fireplaces, gas or wood? Any soldering irons? Ever put up a Christmas tree with old-style light bulbs on it? *'Total electric' does not eliminate the chance of CO problems, it just reduces them. Anything hot near anything that can burn can produce a slow smoldering fire. I need to get one *myself, but since I live alone, none of the above apply to me. Furnace and water heater, both gas fired, are my only two plausible ignition points. Just never got a round tuit. -- aem sends... I live alone too, and if I die from CO poisoning from a candle or Crock-Pot....then so be it. If I start living with a female again and I die from a curling iron...then so be it. I knew a guy who was curled to death. He made a circle 24 inches in diameter. Had to be uncurled to fit in the coffin. |
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