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For Your Clients: Interpreting a Home Inspection Report | RISMedia

For Your Clients: Interpreting a Home Inspection Report | RISMedia.

RISMEDIA, July 8, 2010—A home inspection report is an important document that a potential buyer will have that accurately describes the conditions that exist in the house they are considering buying. It is crucial that your client receive a well written and detailed home inspection report and working with your client to interpret the inspection report can help eliminate confusion and indecision. This article will attempt to give you some guidance to assist your buyers with interpreting a home inspection report.

There are many styles of home inspection reports used by property inspectors, including a hand written checklist, a digital checklist or a computer generated report. But the most important aspect within an inspection report is the descriptions given for each system or component.

A typical home inspection report will be divided up into systems that make up the building. Each system is identified and a report on the condition of each system is delivered to the client.

A system is a group components assembled together through building techniques that make it complete. For example, a roofing system might be made up of several components such as rafters, sheathing, roof covering and flashing. The inspection report will identify the visual components that make up the system and report on their condition.

If there is an issue with the condition of the system or any individual component, the inspection report will comment on the type of deficiency and provide the buyer with possible recommendations such as replacing, repairing, monitoring or even bringing in a professional for further evaluation.

Deficient or defective items: If an item is deemed deficient in the inspector’s opinion, then it is either not functioning as intended, has come to the end its useful life expectancy or has deteriorated to the point that replacement or repair is imminent. An example of a deficient item may be a roof covering with severely cracked and curled shingles, even if there is no sign of leaking. The inspector may report this as deficient because the condition of the system is nearing the end of its useful life and replacement in the very near future is imminent.

Safety issues: If the inspector finds safety issues in the home, the report will reflect the nature of the safety issue—where in the home the safety concern was found and a recommendation to correct the safety concern. Safety issues can be minor in expense but important to the safety of the occupants of the home. For example, a bathroom without a GFCI (ground fault circuit interrupter) may only be $15.00 to repair, but the potential danger it poses for the occupants of the home would necessitate the item being tagged as a safety issue.

Maintenance: If a maintenance item is in the report, the inspector has determined that some maintenance is needed to prevent a safety issue or the deterioration of another part of the home. For example: If the inspector finds the gutters are full of debris but are properly attached to the home and in good condition, they might put that in the report because during a rain storm, the gutters would overflow, dumping large amounts of water next to the foundation of the home and eventually begin to erode the soil around the foundation.

Common terms used in an inspection report

-Recommend: The inspectors’ opinion of how to guide the client to resolve noteworthy issues found during the inspection. Common recommendations would be to replace, repair, monitor or evaluate.

-Visual inspection: The general scope of the inspection is limited to a visual inspection which means that the inspector is not required to disassemble equipment.

-HVAC: Heating ventilation air condition system.

-Condensate line: The copper pipe that runs from the outside air conditioning condenser to the inside furnace (where the A/C coil is located).

-Ductwork: A system of distribution channels used to transmit heated or cooled air from a central system (HVAC) throughout a home.

-Damper: An air valve that regulates the flow of air inside the flue of a furnace or fireplace.

-Pilot light: A small, continuous flame (in a hot water heater, boiler or furnace) that ignites gas or oil burners when needed.

-Accessible: Can be approached or entered by the inspector safely, without difficulty or danger.

-Blow insulation: Fiber insulation in loose form used to insulate attics and existing walls where framing members are not exposed.

-Board and batten: A method of siding in which the joints between vertically placed boards or plywood are covered by narrow strips of wood.

-Buckling: The bending of a building material as a result of wear and tear or contact with a substance such as water.

-Cantilever: A projecting beam or other structure supported only at one end. Any part of a structure that projects beyond its main support and is balanced on it.

-Cast iron: Heavy metal formed by casting on molds. The metal is covered with a porcelain enamel coating to make fixtures such as cast iron tubs.

-Ceiling joist: One of a series of parallel framing members used to support ceiling loads and supported in turn by larger beams, girders or bearing walls. Also called roof joists.

-Cellulose insulation: Ground-up newspaper that is treated with a fire retardant.

-Celotex: A brand of black fibrous board that is used as exterior sheathing.

-Flashing: Material used around any angle in a roof or wall to prevent leaks.

-Earthquake strap: A metal strap used to secure gas hot water heaters to the framing or foundation of a house. It is intended to reduce the chances of having the water heater fall over in an earthquake and causing a gas leak.

-Sump: Pit or large plastic bucket/barrel inside the home designed to collect ground water from a perimeter drain system.

-Sump pump: A submersible pump in a sump pit that pumps any excess ground water to the outside of the home.

-Trap: A plumbing fitting that holds water to prevent air, gas and vermin from backing up into a fixture.

-Knob and tube wiring: A common form of electrical wiring used before World War II. When in good condition, it may still be functional for low amperage use.

-BX cable: Armored electrical cable wrapped in galvanized steel outer covering. A factory assembly of insulated conductors inside a flexible metallic covering.

-Circuit breaker: A protective device which automatically opens an electrical circuit when it is overloaded.

-Ground-fault circuit interrupter (GFCI): A device intended for the protection of personnel that functions to de-energize a circuit

-Grounded: Connected to earth or to some conducting body that serves in place of the earth.

For more information, visit www.hometeaminspection.com.

RISMedia welcomes your questions and comments. Send your e-mail to: realestatemagazinefeedback@rismedia.com.

Copyright© 2010 RISMedia, The Leader in Real Estate Information Systems and Real Estate News. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be republished without permission from RISMedia.

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Posted in Buying, Home Inspections.

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New Foreclosure Search added to TeresaHames.com

Check out our new foreclosure search – you can search by city, state, or zip code and look up properties that are in the pre-foreclosure process, are up for auction, and/or properties that are bank-owned.

TeresaHames.com Foreclosure Search

The search works for most of California – check it out!

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Posted in Foreclosures.


Sierra Club Green Home | Renewable Energy Edition

Newsletter | Sierra Club Green Home

Some interesting info here on Solar energy systems and residential wind turbines, etc.

Also, check out the “Green Pages” directory of service providers.  You can search by zip code and by type of provider.

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Posted in Green Homes, Green Living.

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Market Statistics for Topanga and Malibu

These are Market Statistics reports for Malibu and Topanga.  Provided by Altos Research.

Beware… these are for people who are REALLY into numbers and stats.  The Executive Summaries are one page wrap ups and the Market Updates are in-depth reports.  Enjoy!

Topanga – Week of June 14th, 2010

The median list price in TOPANGA, CA this week is $982,500.  The 90
properties have been on the market for an average of 181 days.

Demand measured by the Market Action Index is increasing and days-
on-market is trending downward.  Even as more properties come
available, these are positive trends for the market.

Download the PDFs:

Executive Summary TOPANGA_2010-06-11

Market Update TOPANGA_2010-06-11

Malibu – Week of June 14th, 2010

Download the PDFs:

Market Update [Condo]  MALIBU_2010-06-11

Executive Summary_MALIBU_90265_2010-06-11

Market Update  MALIBU_90265_2010-06-11

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Posted in Uncategorized.


47 Skills You Need to Survive Homeownership | This Old House

Every time I visit this site, I find loads of great tips for homeowners whether you are just cleaning or painting or building a deck or remodeling a kitchen.  Great stuff here.

47 Skills You Need to Survive Homeownership | Home & Real Estate | This Old House

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Posted in homeownership.

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Great Child Safety Tips for Homeowners from The Old House

Think Like a Kid | Child Safety in the Home | Photos | Healthy Home | This Old House.

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Posted in Buying, Home Security, Sellers, Topanga.

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Prefab Houses Go Green – Real Estate – SmartMoney.com

Prefab Houses Go Green – Personal Finance – Real Estate – SmartMoney.com.

Prefabbers boast not only of their homes’ lower resource consumption but also of the inherently sustainable nature of the building process. According to the Green Building Council, assembly-line construction wastes far fewer materials than on-site home building. Trucking a wide-load house across state lines can spew less carbon than all of a crew’s daily trips to a traditional site over the course of, say, eight or nine months. Experts point to other factory advantages as well: Materials are protected from vandalism, theft and damaging weather exposure. Parts can be cut and assembled with computer-aided precision. And because homes are built to endure strong vibration and wind shear during transport, they’re often constructed more sturdily.

Such quality may surprise buyers expecting prefab homes to be flimsy tornado magnets. The other unexpected element? That they range in size and style from cozy cottages to sleek, modern villas. Designs by pioneering green-modular architect Michelle Kaufmann, with their warm woods, clean lines and interplay of inside and outside space, draw comparisons to early Frank Lloyd Wright. New World Home, a New York–based eco-prefab outfit, specializes in historical styles like Greek Revival and Dutch Colonial—many complete with stately porches. And North Carolina firm Deltec Homes offers designs for three-story homes up to 7,500 square feet. Trailer park fodder they’re not.

In the Topanga Canyon and Malibu areas, there are several manufactured home communities that are filled with pre-fab homes!  Top O’ Topanga (owned land), Paradise Cove and the Pt. Dume Club (on leased land), Seminole Springs (a bit further afoot off of Mulholland in the Santa Monica Mountains), Oak Forest (just a short hop off the 101 in Westlake Village, and so on…  All great places to put in a new green pre-fab home!

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Posted in Green Homes, Green Living, Malibu, Topanga.

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13 Things Your Home Remodeler Won’t Tell You | Ways to Save | Reader’s Digest

More tips from Reader’s Digest… They have a bunch of these articles with great tips.  Might be worth checking out the whole site.  Lots of useful info here.

13 Things Your Home Remodeler Won”t Tell You

With business down it may be the perfect time to indulge in some home improvement projects. Read on for more secrets of home remodelers.

via 13 Things Your Home Remodeler Won’t Tell You | Ways to Save | Reader’s Digest.

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Posted in Remodeling.

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13 Things a Burglar Won’t Tell You | Reader’s Digest

Some good tips here from Reader’s Digest…

13 Things a Burglar Won”t Tell You

Should you spend your money on a home security system? A look inside a burglar's mind might help you decide.

via 13 Things a Burglar Won’t Tell You | Security Threats | Reader’s Digest.

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Fabulous house at Malibou Lake

image

So adorable…

This property is listed by The McLaughlin Group  and it is absolutely adorable.  It’s a charming cottage with a dock on Malibou Lake.  What a great family retreat or a great full-time residence.  It’s lakeside living but still so close to everything!

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Posted in Listings, Malibu, Uncategorized.