Did you buy this? Happy for you bro! CongratsJohnny_P wrote: ↑Wed Aug 23, 2023 12:21 pm 3 bed 3 bath home close to a downtown area but with a cute yard and ability to build an addition in the future. It’s small at 1697 sq ft and expensive at 610k. But it will work for now. Especially with a second little on the way.
Needs just a bit of work to move in but not much. Eventually I’ll need to replace all the windows as they’re single pane and old Af but they have storm windows over them so maybe not too drafty.
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Home chat 1.0
- Tar
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No money for a reno since we had to raise our budget by $160k. Just enough money to demolish a too-big island and remove two back drafting gas water heaters and replace with electric.Desertbreh wrote: ↑Fri Aug 25, 2023 12:26 pmIts been depressing 2000 miles away. Good luck on the reno.
- coogles
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'grats dude! I'm sure you're incredibly relieved. The place isn't huge, but ppl have raised two kids in houses that size(or smaller) for generations, it'll all work out. That's only slightly smaller than our first house and I was 90% sure I wanted to stay until we found out #2 was #s 2 and 3.
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Can confirm. One of six kids growing up in a 1200sqft 3bed 2bath house. It never felt weird since it’s all we knew.coogles wrote: ↑Fri Aug 25, 2023 8:37 pm'grats dude! I'm sure you're incredibly relieved. The place isn't huge, but ppl have raised two kids in houses that size(or smaller) for generations, it'll all work out. That's only slightly smaller than our first house and I was 90% sure I wanted to stay until we found out #2 was #s 2 and 3.
- golftdibrad1
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ewww why do this, fix the venting!Johnny_P wrote: ↑Fri Aug 25, 2023 2:44 pmNo money for a reno since we had to raise our budget by $160k. Just enough money to demolish a too-big island and remove two back drafting gas water heaters and replace with electric.Desertbreh wrote: ↑Fri Aug 25, 2023 12:26 pm
Its been depressing 2000 miles away. Good luck on the reno.
also, inside not as bad as you made it out to be. Its nice digs. Close and live your life. Start saving for private skool.
Desertbreh wrote: I'm happy for Brad because nobody jerks it to the Miata harder on this forum and that is the Crown Prince of Miatas.D Griff wrote: Inserting 'nobody jerks it harder to the Miata than Brad' quote.
- Johnny_P
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It’s the easy way out of the issue that will guarantee no CO coming back into the house. The water heaters are natural draft. They are tied into the exhaust of the home heater which is forced draft. Theoretically it can work but may require different sized exhausts or a separate pipe / liner in the chimney.golftdibrad1 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 28, 2023 4:27 pmewww why do this, fix the venting!
also, inside not as bad as you made it out to be. Its nice digs. Close and live your life. Start saving for private skool.
- golftdibrad1
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you are an engineer.... flow induced suction, its a thing. I've NEVER, and i mean NEVER seen a gas water heater that had a forced draft exhaust. Its just not a thing. Unless you are measuring backflow, like don't worry about it. I mean there are lots of direct venting gas appliances anyway, stove, fireplaces. There are sizing calcs. You only really get CO if the O2 level drops too low. You'd still be better off just MOVING the vent vs an appliance change. In your climate electric water heating is going to cost an arm and a leg too.Johnny_P wrote: ↑Wed Aug 30, 2023 11:11 amIt’s the easy way out of the issue that will guarantee no CO coming back into the house. The water heaters are natural draft. They are tied into the exhaust of the home heater which is forced draft. Theoretically it can work but may require different sized exhausts or a separate pipe / liner in the chimney.golftdibrad1 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 28, 2023 4:27 pm
ewww why do this, fix the venting!
also, inside not as bad as you made it out to be. Its nice digs. Close and live your life. Start saving for private skool.
Desertbreh wrote: I'm happy for Brad because nobody jerks it to the Miata harder on this forum and that is the Crown Prince of Miatas.D Griff wrote: Inserting 'nobody jerks it harder to the Miata than Brad' quote.
- MexicanYarisTK
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Congrats jp! Then once things are settled, you can eventually go back to your new toy, no more park by feelers
- Johnny_P
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The home heating system is fan assisted. Tied to the same exhaust pipe as two natural draft water heaters.golftdibrad1 wrote: ↑Wed Aug 30, 2023 11:24 amyou are an engineer.... flow induced suction, its a thing. I've NEVER, and i mean NEVER seen a gas water heater that had a forced draft exhaust. Its just not a thing. Unless you are measuring backflow, like don't worry about it. I mean there are lots of direct venting gas appliances anyway, stove, fireplaces. There are sizing calcs. You only really get CO if the O2 level drops too low. You'd still be better off just MOVING the vent vs an appliance change. In your climate electric water heating is going to cost an arm and a leg too.Johnny_P wrote: ↑Wed Aug 30, 2023 11:11 am
It’s the easy way out of the issue that will guarantee no CO coming back into the house. The water heaters are natural draft. They are tied into the exhaust of the home heater which is forced draft. Theoretically it can work but may require different sized exhausts or a separate pipe / liner in the chimney.
The water heaters have evidence of exhaust back flow visible on top of the units in the form of a ton of dust and soot in a radial pattern around the natural draft vent with no dust / soot in areas shielded by water inlet and outlet pipes to the units. So the gas appliances are in fact dumping exhaust gas into the basement.
I could potentially try messing with the vent pipes but I need to take a closer look at what’s going on with the system. Will need to check if all the appliances are category I or if the home heater is category III. All I know for sure is it’s not functioning as intended and the easy solution is remove the gas water heaters.
- golftdibrad1
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oh, well then.
I'd still replace with gas, electric water heaters suck
Desertbreh wrote: I'm happy for Brad because nobody jerks it to the Miata harder on this forum and that is the Crown Prince of Miatas.D Griff wrote: Inserting 'nobody jerks it harder to the Miata than Brad' quote.
- Johnny_P
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They’re a little bit cheaper to run. Otherwise not much difference. If I can get the venting to work right.golftdibrad1 wrote: ↑Thu Aug 31, 2023 7:58 amoh, well then.
I'd still replace with gas, electric water heaters suck
- Johnny_P
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Well the work to make it a reasonable place to live starts next. It’s not a big list but a handful of tedious things. Like all the windowsills need to be refinished as they’re completely trashed. Paint some things. Structural analysis is scheduled for Friday to see if we can remove these ugly ass columns. Etc.
Kind of ska downer that’s what you get for the price but whatever.
Then furniture and moving and listing our current home. Which had more water coming in with the last storm because the neighbors suck. But yeah another 2 ish months hopefully and it’s all over.
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Congrats on this. get it done.
Desertbreh wrote: I'm happy for Brad because nobody jerks it to the Miata harder on this forum and that is the Crown Prince of Miatas.D Griff wrote: Inserting 'nobody jerks it harder to the Miata than Brad' quote.
- Johnny_P
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They threw in their lawnmower, a ladder big enough to get to the gutters, and a wheelbarrow too.
At settlement the notary guy that was coordinating everything asked them to sign the price escalation clause from our offer. They had no idea it was even there. And she said it didn’t matter anyway “the house was yours.” I guess our heart felt letter helped!
At settlement the notary guy that was coordinating everything asked them to sign the price escalation clause from our offer. They had no idea it was even there. And she said it didn’t matter anyway “the house was yours.” I guess our heart felt letter helped!