Originally posted by: reicherb
I tried calling and the gas guy is only there from 8-9am and is going to "try and call me." I had the electrical inspected and it's fine. I'm also not worried about not being able to sell the house. Do you actually know people that ask for permits for previous work when they look at a house?
Originally posted by: ergeorge
Originally posted by: reicherb
I tried calling and the gas guy is only there from 8-9am and is going to "try and call me." I had the electrical inspected and it's fine. I'm also not worried about not being able to sell the house. Do you actually know people that ask for permits for previous work when they look at a house?
I have. And withdrew an offer because they didn't.
Was looking at a house. It had a large, fairly new detached garage, and the electrical work looked sloppy. Nothing serious, just didn't look profesional. That and a socket testor showed switched polarity on one of the sockets. I looked up permits on the house at our regional building department's website and found that the whole garage was not permitted. The least of this is that the estimated property taxes were going to go up next time it was assesed.
I asked the guy about it, and he said he did all the work himself, and didn't want to deal with all that "permit BS". Which is fine. I do most of my own work on my home. I'm building a 1400 ft^2 addition right now. But I just didn't get a good impression from this guys work, and it hadn't been inspected, so I passed. It wasn't the only factor, but it was there.
A home inspector I know always pulls the permit history for homes he inspects just to get a feel for what work has been done by whom.
Originally posted by: reicherb
Originally posted by: ergeorge
Originally posted by: reicherb
I tried calling and the gas guy is only there from 8-9am and is going to "try and call me." I had the electrical inspected and it's fine. I'm also not worried about not being able to sell the house. Do you actually know people that ask for permits for previous work when they look at a house?
I have. And withdrew an offer because they didn't.
Was looking at a house. It had a large, fairly new detached garage, and the electrical work looked sloppy. Nothing serious, just didn't look profesional. That and a socket testor showed switched polarity on one of the sockets. I looked up permits on the house at our regional building department's website and found that the whole garage was not permitted. The least of this is that the estimated property taxes were going to go up next time it was assesed.
I asked the guy about it, and he said he did all the work himself, and didn't want to deal with all that "permit BS". Which is fine. I do most of my own work on my home. I'm building a 1400 ft^2 addition right now. But I just didn't get a good impression from this guys work, and it hadn't been inspected, so I passed. It wasn't the only factor, but it was there.
A home inspector I know always pulls the permit history for homes he inspects just to get a feel for what work has been done by whom.
I guess I agree that if I saw shotty work, the lack of a permit would make it even worse, but the fact is, shotty work is shotty work wether it's inspected or not.
I replaced the service to my house and garage and burried everything. It took the inspector 5 minutes to inspect it all and he didn't even open the meter socket to see if it was right so the inspection might not really mean that much. I know mine wasn't, and I was pretty mad I paid money for what I got.
Originally posted by: NogginBoink
Originally posted by: reicherb
Originally posted by: ergeorge
Originally posted by: reicherb
I tried calling and the gas guy is only there from 8-9am and is going to "try and call me." I had the electrical inspected and it's fine. I'm also not worried about not being able to sell the house. Do you actually know people that ask for permits for previous work when they look at a house?
I have. And withdrew an offer because they didn't.
Was looking at a house. It had a large, fairly new detached garage, and the electrical work looked sloppy. Nothing serious, just didn't look profesional. That and a socket testor showed switched polarity on one of the sockets. I looked up permits on the house at our regional building department's website and found that the whole garage was not permitted. The least of this is that the estimated property taxes were going to go up next time it was assesed.
I asked the guy about it, and he said he did all the work himself, and didn't want to deal with all that "permit BS". Which is fine. I do most of my own work on my home. I'm building a 1400 ft^2 addition right now. But I just didn't get a good impression from this guys work, and it hadn't been inspected, so I passed. It wasn't the only factor, but it was there.
A home inspector I know always pulls the permit history for homes he inspects just to get a feel for what work has been done by whom.
I guess I agree that if I saw shotty work, the lack of a permit would make it even worse, but the fact is, shotty work is shotty work wether it's inspected or not.
I replaced the service to my house and garage and burried everything. It took the inspector 5 minutes to inspect it all and he didn't even open the meter socket to see if it was right so the inspection might not really mean that much. I know mine wasn't, and I was pretty mad I paid money for what I got.
I also had a "quickie" electrical inspection when I replaced the breaker box in my house.
One nice thing, though, is that if the house burns down, I can prove to the insurance company that the electrical work was inspected and they can't deny a claim because of it.![]()
