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Home Inspection Center
Home inspections are a critical part of the buying or selling process. The standard purchase contract requires that buyers sign a "Buyer's Inspection Advisory" which advises them to have a professional home inspection to uncover any problems. For sellers, getting your home inspected before an offer allows you to remedy and/or disclose any problems, thereby avoiding any surprise for buyers when they write an offer.

Here are some of the resources available:
1. Home Inspection Video - See a home inspection!
2. Read an actual home inspection report.
3. Read/search Barry Stone's column, Inspector's In the House (below).
4. Send a question using the form to the right. ===>
5. If you are a Seller, get your own inspection before you put your home on the market.

California does not require any license to be a home inspector, so it is important for both home buyers and sellers to make sure that they hire an inspector who is a certified residential inspector and who carries errors and omissions insurance. To help you think through the selection of your home inspector, click here for our 10 Tips.

QUESTIONS/ANSWERS

Click on any of these topics to read questions and answers by syndicated columnist Barry Stone.
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Other Issues
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As a buyer, you can be present on the home inspection (and we really recommend it). Being there gives you a chance to ask questions, to see and discuss what Mark has found, and to ask other questions about your new home. Some of the areas inspected include: structure, heating and cooling, roof, electrical system, plumbing and fixtures, attic, basement and/or crawl space, foundation, gutters, insulation, interior and exterior walls, porches and decks, and the water heater and appliances.

A good inspector helps both buyers and sellers become aware of any defects that weren't already known. (If they had been known, they would have been disclosed.) Please note: Sellers have no obligation to repair any defects. Repair requests are just that--requests. However, if an unknown defect is a safety issue, violates the then-current building code, or affects functionality, many sellers will accommodate the request in one way or another. A good inspection helps to put all those issues on the table so that everyone is satisfied with the transaction.

For information about various topics, just click on any of the links to the left or run your own search! One of our 600+ articles is posted below.

Examples of Inspection Findings
Available Now!
Picture details appear here.

A question from one of Barry Stone's columns....

Home Reeks of Cigarette Smoke
Inspector's in the House by Barry Stone, Certified Building Inspector

Dear Barry:
Before we bought our home, the sellers kept flowery room deodorizers throughout the house. We didn't think much about it at the time. But since moving in, we've become increasingly aware of the rank cigarette smell that permeates the interior. Our home inspector has no suggestions for getting rid of this awfulness and we're wondering what, if anything, can be done to eliminate it. We suspect that the sellers deliberately concealed this smell -- a suspicion that has been confirmed by some of our new neighbors. What, if anything, can be done to remedy this condition, and how should we communicate our displeasure with the sellers? Dana

Dear Dana: For those who do not smoke, the ashtray atmosphere of a smoker's house is exceedingly unpleasant. The search for a cure-all to cigarette odor is like the quest for the Holy Grail. Though sought and hoped for by many, it remains, as yet, unattained. Products and techniques compete in the marketplace, each professing to be the answer, but none has earned the popular acclaim that would accompany a truly successful treatment.

There are service providers who employ ozone generators and hot air treatments to eradicate smoke smells, and there are various chemical products, each alleging to be the great smoke smell panacea. Most of these have been successful to greater or lesser degrees, but the reviews have been mixed. Some users have hailed their effectiveness, while others have been less than satisfied with the results.

A Google search of "cigarette odor" renders more than 900,000 websites. Many promote the sale of "miracle" products, each promising to be the great odor eradicator. Some may weaken the impact of offensive smoke odors, but none has delivered the final knockout punch. Satisfied product users may disagree with this assessment and proclaim the efficacy of one concoction or another. If any of these inventions were proven to be effective, the hotel industry would be its greatest customer. It would no longer be necessary for non-smoking travelers to request non-smoking rooms.

The most effectual short-term approach to the smoke odor problem involves total repainting of walls and ceilings, complete replacement of carpets and draperies, and extensive cleanup of everything else. Another problem area that warrants attention and is often overlooked is the interior of forced air heating ducts. These can emit odors every time the heating or air conditioning is operated. Some kinds of air ducts can be cleaned, while others must be replaced.

The most reliable long-term remedy, however, is the one usually mentioned as a final footnote. It is the simple passage of time. If you live in your home long enough, the cigarette odors will gradually but surely become a vague remembrance.

As for the sellers of your home, they may or may not have been deliberate in masking the smoke smells. You can pursue them with various means of formal and legal complaint, or you can simply let the memory of their offense fade with the receding essence of their final departing smoke.

Distributed by Access Media Group. To write to Barry Stone, please visit him on the web at www.housedetective.com.

Margaret Hokkanen
(760) 942-4242     Team.At.SurfTheTurf.com

Representing Both Buyers and Sellers
On the Web at
http://www.SolanaDelMar.com
and other areas of San Diego County.

Last Updated: 9/4/2010;8:23 AM


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