Adventures in Home Buying

Stop Water Before It Wins

Jim Troth

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Water doesn’t need a storm to wreck a house. Sometimes it only needs a gap the width of a pencil, a downspout that stops six inches from the foundation, or a “small” roof leak you plan to handle later. We get practical about the home inspection issues that look minor on paper but can snowball into rot, mold, foundation cracks, and expensive rebuilds.

We start inside with one of the most common hidden problems we see: missing caulk where the bathtub meets the floor. It sounds trivial until water slips under the flooring and quietly damages the wood underneath. From there we move outside to the real MVPs of moisture control: gutters, downspout extensions, and proper grading. We share a story where a homeowner was being steered toward a $30,000 basement waterproofing job, even though the real fix was directing water away from the house.

We also cover non-water findings that still matter, like electrical panel double taps, plus the value of furnace and HVAC maintenance to catch condensation leaks before they rust out equipment. Along the way, we talk about choosing contractors wisely, why the “last man in theory” can push some roofers toward full replacements, and why reading the contract can save you from nasty surprises if damage spreads.

If you care about home maintenance, Ohio home inspection advice, and the fastest ways to reduce risk in a new or older home, you’ll get a clear checklist from this conversation. Subscribe, share this with a homeowner friend, and leave a review with the small fix you want us to cover next.

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Why Small Problems Grow

SPEAKER_02

Hello everybody. It's Jim, and of course, Laura's here with me.

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Hello, everyone.

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Alright, so Laura.

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So Jim.

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It is April when we're recording this. Just had Easter.

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Wow, it is April. Cool.

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Yes, yes. So let's talk about some of the most important things that uh we find on home inspections. Therefore, it's in the report that people should uh you know pay attention to. Yeah, focus on before they become bigger issues down the road. So Laura, what is your my first thought regarding a small issue that ends up being a bigger issue always has to do with water.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, I was just thinking, so like water intrusion in a roof, water intrusion in the basement, impacting the foundation. So those those were where my mind went with that.

Tub Caulk And Hidden Rot

SPEAKER_02

Yeah. Well one thing that people often do not pay attention to is especially like kids' bathroom. You got the tub where you don't have the caulking between the floor material and the bathtub.

SPEAKER_01

Kids splash in a bathtub.

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I'd splash. I'd splash now. I don't care. But anyway, you would there's a gap there often. And then once water gets inside there, you really can't see it because it's underneath that uh we'll say linoium. It's underneath there. You can't see it, but over but underneath that linoum, you have uh wood. And that wood over time is going to rot. And to prevent that, A, don't don't have kids, don't let them take showers. One or the both.

SPEAKER_01

They're gonna need showers, honey. So that that's that's a non-issue.

SPEAKER_02

That's not a practical solution there.

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That's not a solution.

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So so the other option is maybe spend th three, five dollars worth of caulking material, then caulk where the floor meets the tub.

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Now, can I say something on this?

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Of course. I couldn't stop you anyway.

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If you have not done any caulking before, it is not something you pick up with great rapidity. This is something that you need to practice. However, that having been said, it doesn't matter how crappy it looks, as long as there's no gaps in the seal preventing water from getting into that that floor space underneath it. It can look crappy. Just just practice and and learn. There are kits out there where you can buy like this little rubber thing and then just run along it and make it look all nice and pretty. No, it's not. Like I dude, my shit stuff styled in, like, seriously. I've gotten fingers. I get a rubber glove and I put it on and I just guide it down.

SPEAKER_02

I've done that also, yeah.

SPEAKER_01

It works great. Like I have I feel like I have more control over it for the depth because it's not a plastic device, and I've got the control. But for someone just starting out, that stuff is perfectly fine, and it makes sure that it gets all that stuff covered.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, they do it, they do have little plastic things that help make it smooth and uniform. That stuff does work great.

SPEAKER_01

There's a kit that you can get where you can also pull up old um caulking and then redo it to make sure that it's a little bit more than that.

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It's the same little tool, other end of it is the digger to pull it out. But anyway, easy, not expensive at all, can be very important because you do not want your floor to rot out around your tub.

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That would be bad, especially if you're falling through it.

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Well, yeah.

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Or your kids are falling through it.

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I've never seen one get that bad, but I have seen them where they're very soft, and it's like, nope, you they need to replace the floor in there. So there's that. So once again, it's water.

Downspouts And Foundation Pressure

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Another simple thing uh that's commonly found in reports is your downspout extensions. Or lack thereof. Or lack of because the downspouts they go down toward the foundation, and maybe the and that little part, the bottom of it curves out six inches maybe. That is not nearly enough. And I've seen people just leave them there like that, or the downspout, it comes down, goes into a pipe that then guides the water all the way to the curb.

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But the pipe may be blocked.

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Yeah, or it's disconnected.

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Or it's disconnected in.

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Because the gutter just slipped out because the ground settled, pulled away, disconnected. Those are really easy to fix, those are not hard at all. But if you let that go, you are looking at faces from uh foundation problems. Because that water when it gathers around that foundation and has a lot of weight, it will be pushing towards the house, toward the basement. And if it is winter time and it freezes, remember water expands when it freezes. You're now all that water press gonna shove that foundation in, and that's where we see lots of horizontal cracks in the foundation. I see in basements where the bottom of the foundation is where a water cells all the way down there, that is pushing in. So the bottom of it's kicking out. So your simple gutters and downspouts huge difference, inexpensive, but gonna save you thousands of dollars if you catch things early enough.

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Well,

The Basement Fix That Wasn't

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remember that one guy that bought a campground, and he got talked out of doing an inspection on the house because he was buying the quote campground.

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I remember.

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So you do an inspection for him, and he's got some basement company telling him like 30 to 40,000 to fix the basement, and you're like, well, try this first. Yeah, just the downspouts, the extensions, and the grating.

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They want the pound, the waterproof to come one and charge him $30,000 to waterproof the basement. The basement was it was like a walkout basement, so it's not like very deep into the soil or anything like that. But $30,000 to waterproof, and they're gonna dig a trench on the inside of the basement to direct water to the sump pump. And as far as I can, those are those just take care of the symptom of the water coming in. This house, what the guy really needed was downspouts and gutters on the house. There were none, and to make sure the grating around the house sloped away from the house. He didn't have any of the any of those things. And that found that waterproofing company was going to charge him $30,000, and they were not even going to address the cause of the problem, just the symptom. Like it's like, hey, doctor, I got a broken arm, it really is really painful. Doctor just gives you an aspirin. Doesn't fix your break. So anyway, that's not gonna help in the long run. Once again, it's the downspouts, gutters controlling the water. That is a huge uh it's a simple thing, but it can become a huge issue for a house.

Roof Leaks Get Expensive Fast

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So Lord, what like little roof leaks, those are important to take care of those.

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Right.

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Because they're starting off little, it will only get worse from there because that wood rots, now you gotta replace the wood sheathing. Hopefully, it's not getting the say the truss wet, because then that truss rots, now you now you're gonna have really sagging areas and more structural concerns with that.

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Catch it while it's small and in the beginning.

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Yes. Habitation

Home Inspection Company Message

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Electrical Panel Double Taps

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Other issues that seem little. I I I guess I've I see a lot of people with a double taps on the electrical panel.

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Ask about that.

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It depends on your type of breaker, but most breakers are designed only to hold one wire. There's some that are designed to hold two, but they need to be in a very specific position. I I've seen people go, well, that's no big deal. I'm like, Well it it could be a big deal, but get it fixed. It's not it's not expensive to do that. No.

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Same thing. Especially if you've got the room in your panel.

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Yes. Yep. Now

Soil Grading To Move Water

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another thing that that should be done that is not a big deal, and that really is this kind of thing that's related to water, is the grading around of your soil. You need to make certain your your dirt is higher near your house than it is farther away. That way your water from melting snow, rain, it when it uh flows, it flows away from the house. It's kind of like the gutters and downspouts. Correct the water away from the house. And it's just dirt. You just bring dirt into the house, dump it. I mean, you could pay somebody, I don't know, I haven't bought dirt forever. Yeah, pay somebody uh $500 to bring in a big a truckload of dirt, and then you put it around your house close to your house, not too high. You don't want you don't want touching the the siding. You want some space there, and do it that way, or you just move if you have have the land just moved around yourself, do it that way. But that's one of the things that should be done all the time. Now,

Furnace Maintenance And Condensation Leaks

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here's something we don't see very often is people don't maintain their furnaces.

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Oh, and and that just is insane to me because it can last so much longer.

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Yes, yeah. So you should look at have your furnace, HFAC companies will tell you look at it, have it looked at and inspected every single year. We rarely see anybody do that. Every two years is far better than most people do. But what's going to happen, they can catch a condensation leak early and therefore keep your furnace from rusting out and causing other issues. So that is not expensive to do.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, and usually you can get like specials, they'll run every so often, like 99 bucks for a service or 69 bucks for a service, you know, depending on what company's running what when.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, it's well worth it. It is now you do know that some companies though, like when they're saying, hey, I don't know, $79 for a radon test. For any, yeah, or or any drain cleaning, you know they're coming in with the hope that they're gonna hope that they're gonna find something else they can sell you, which I get, and you all should understand, like, yeah, I I get it. They need it, they want to make some money, but you also want to get your your problem taken taken care of as well, less costly. But you can always cut get a second opinion and have somebody else take a look at it.

SPEAKER_01

It it definitely makes sense to have an inspection company come out and do a maintenance inspection for you. That way we can tell you exactly what's going on. This is what you need, this is who you should contact. We've got a list of professionals that aren't gonna screw you over as a client. They, you know, they're good, reputable companies that treat people with respect.

SPEAKER_02

Yep, and that remind that reminds me of the roofer. Right. We're not gonna give his name, but if if you use that for a home inspection, you'd end up getting it. Yeah, you'll what we can let you know. But he alright, here's here's the last man in in theory.

SPEAKER_01

The what?

The Last Man In Theory

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The last man in. So let's say you have a roof, you have somebody come the roof oh say the roof is all messed up. And this is actually kind of related to what I did the other uh like two weeks ago. So you have a roofer come in, the roof's all messed up. The roofer who comes in just to fix that, he does not want to come in just to fix the issue because the roofer before did not do a lot of things correctly. So there's lots that's all issues. The last guy in does not be want to be responsible for everything that went wrong before, even the things he didn't touch. So last man in theory is the new roofer in this case doesn't want to take the blame for it, so it's so he's gonna say we need to redo it. This is his best interest to redo the whole roof. First of all, he's gonna be blamed for a work that he didn't even touch.

SPEAKER_01

Or yeah, and I can't say as I blame him because I mean, let's be realistic. He goes up, he works on the roof, all of a sudden there's a leak, and it's not from something he did, it's from something somebody else did. But who's gonna believe that?

SPEAKER_02

And they'll complain. Well, well, you should have seen that while he's here. And he's like, dude, you didn't even want me to even look at that. So that's last-minute in theory. So but we do know a roofer who will come in and do just repairs and not tell you you need a brand new entire roof when maybe you really don't. Really do just need one section, and it really pairs well when we do a home inspection report because we're up in the attic seeing if there's leaks or not. So if he does repair work and there's still no leaks, Mike, listen, he didn't cause problems in this area, it was already there, whatever. But he's a good guy, but we can help with that stuff. But uh, yeah, water. Water's the big one.

SPEAKER_01

You've got mold, you've got deterioration, you've got rot.

SPEAKER_02

So those are some things that should be taken care of, not hard, definitely not expensive. Roof they say you have a $600 roof repair that needs done, okay? Say flashing around the chimney, yeah, $600.

SPEAKER_01

That's a lot cheaper than $20,000 for a new roof.

SPEAKER_02

$20,000 for a brand new roof, or you let that let the flashing issue go, and now it's gonna be like $15, $15,000 because all right, you ride out part of your roof because you let it go for a while.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, and then it damaged stuff, and then the water came down, damaged stuff down below. So now you have material for down inside your house, and for items that got damaged, you're gonna have to replace stuff.

SPEAKER_02

That just

Contracts Liability And Damage Control

SPEAKER_02

reminded me of another thing uh years ago. We did an inspection, we called out some issues, some roofing company came in and fixed those issues. Okay. Okay, they didn't do a good job because there's water coming in and it damaged the interior of the house. The roofing company, by their paperwork, had no responsibility for any damage on the inside of the house.

SPEAKER_01

I remember that one too. That's been a long time. Remember that?

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Yes, yes. So be careful you choose.

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And and read, read, for the love of God, read the contracts, people. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Read the contract because they're not taking responsibility for anything and move on to another company.

SPEAKER_02

Well, here's another the lady was living there. All right, it takes a while for the water to get that bad that the ceiling's gonna collapse. And this did collapse on her, I believe, right?

SPEAKER_01

I I think it did for me. I it dude, it's been a long time.

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So this gets into the thing like, all right, how long did you let this go before you report it? So there's oh, I can't think of other term, but there's a legal term that basically as soon as you see there's an issue, you can't stop it. You can't just let it keep keep going, make that make it worse and worse. You have a responsibility to mitigate mitigation of damages, you have a responsibility to to halt that. So, anyway, I think that's it on this one. I don't like I I like around 15 minutes or so.

Read The Report And Call Us

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So always get it inspected and take care of the little things. And most things are not big things.

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Read the report, read the report, understand your house. If you have questions, call us. That's what we're here for.

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Yep. All right, bye-bye.

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Bye.