Coyote machine
Super Member
- Joined
- May 4, 2009
- Messages
- 7,663
- Location
- Southern VT
- Tractor
- 22 SANY SY 50U, '10 Kioti DK 40se/hst KL-401 FEL, loaded tires, KB-2485 bhoe, Tuffline TB160 BB, Woods QA forks, MIE Hydraulic bhoe thumb & ripper tooth, Igland 4001 winch, & GR-20 Log Grapple. Woods BBX72" Brush Mower. Diamondplate aluminum canopy
I hear you on the blown in insulation and its fire resistance. What truly amazes me is that supposedly professional people who at the very least ought to know better end up putting families like yours at risk by doing the shoddy installation work they did on your house. :confused2:
To say nothing of what you had to pay them to do it WRONG to begin with?!
And what if something bad had happened because of their crappy workmanship? Would they have taken responsibility for the cause/effect? I seriously doubt it.
And do they do this kind of thing because they can and it is out of sight- therefore less likely to be noticed by you the homeowner/consumer.
Man, I would be so infuriated, as I'm sure you are,- I would be torn between wanting them to correct it at their expense and with your final approval and wanting to have nothing to do with them whatsoever because of their poor quality work the first time around. I feel for you and the situation. I am there as we speak with rain coming down in my brand new kitchen/mudroom because they screwed up on the insulation of the ceiling roof. I have to run my ceiling fans constantly to keep water, which is a result of condensation reaching the ceiling, from dripping down at random times of year. Water has damaged my pine plank T&G ceiling by forming condensation behind the boards in the cathedral ceiling and releasing it and staining end grain with black water mark damage. Then to add insult to injury the water ends up running down the boards onto the top of the walls and then staining the entire way down the wall in random streaks. We have to move our dining room table and chairs to keep them from being damaged and put drip catchers all over the place. Most recently I found water was entering the mud room walls now that we have the fans going constantly, the condensation is pushed out to the walls perimeter and leaks onto the Bose in wall speakers, and will eventually destroy them too. I have yet to find an adequate solution nor have I heard one proposed from anyone, including the contractor who did all the work and now leaves me to deal with it. AUUGGH!!!
Homeownership is full of fun adventures into near insanity isn't it?!
To say nothing of what you had to pay them to do it WRONG to begin with?!
And what if something bad had happened because of their crappy workmanship? Would they have taken responsibility for the cause/effect? I seriously doubt it.
And do they do this kind of thing because they can and it is out of sight- therefore less likely to be noticed by you the homeowner/consumer.
Man, I would be so infuriated, as I'm sure you are,- I would be torn between wanting them to correct it at their expense and with your final approval and wanting to have nothing to do with them whatsoever because of their poor quality work the first time around. I feel for you and the situation. I am there as we speak with rain coming down in my brand new kitchen/mudroom because they screwed up on the insulation of the ceiling roof. I have to run my ceiling fans constantly to keep water, which is a result of condensation reaching the ceiling, from dripping down at random times of year. Water has damaged my pine plank T&G ceiling by forming condensation behind the boards in the cathedral ceiling and releasing it and staining end grain with black water mark damage. Then to add insult to injury the water ends up running down the boards onto the top of the walls and then staining the entire way down the wall in random streaks. We have to move our dining room table and chairs to keep them from being damaged and put drip catchers all over the place. Most recently I found water was entering the mud room walls now that we have the fans going constantly, the condensation is pushed out to the walls perimeter and leaks onto the Bose in wall speakers, and will eventually destroy them too. I have yet to find an adequate solution nor have I heard one proposed from anyone, including the contractor who did all the work and now leaves me to deal with it. AUUGGH!!!
Homeownership is full of fun adventures into near insanity isn't it?!