How to be a Home Inspector Badass
1:55
Free tool for home inspectors
5:35
How to fight insurance rate hikes!
2:30
New construction, poor planning!
1:24
3 biggest things inspecting pools
2:18
1 big reason home inspectors suck
3:02
3 easy attic hacks
2:33
Жыл бұрын
Пікірлер
@AProHomeDamon
@AProHomeDamon 3 күн бұрын
Little Rock inside? How did you get a city in Arkansas inside the backflow prevention device?
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 3 күн бұрын
@AProHomeDamon LOL it's a God thing
@MiguelAngelIriarte
@MiguelAngelIriarte 3 күн бұрын
I disagree. The inspector needs to fall into the pool. That would be a more exact test.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 3 күн бұрын
@@MiguelAngelIriarte AGREED
@BScott-hi2hc
@BScott-hi2hc 10 күн бұрын
Thank you sir. The advice is greatly appreciated. God bless.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 10 күн бұрын
@BScott-hi2hc thanks for watching!!!
@AProHomeDamon
@AProHomeDamon 17 күн бұрын
0:14 Every other time you flush your water heater tank, change the anodes to extend the tank life. Getting stinky rotten egg water, black water? Anode and tank are shot. Time for a new water heater. Just replaced 2 this week. One in my home and one in my rental house. Had a bit of help from my next door neighbor. He's a master plumber..
@TinyGiraffes
@TinyGiraffes 18 күн бұрын
If they're mineral deposits, why not pour some acid in the heater and then drain it from a sink tap? Acetic Acid is like 25$ a pint and once mixed in the water will likely go from like a 1.4 to a 2-3ph which is lemon juice to vinegar. Grabbing some of those deposits and seeing if they melt in vinegar could help test the concept. If you find yourself in the situation where you could test it either way, I'd love to see it! Oh and I would per-dilute the acid a bit to increase surface area and prevent rusting.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 17 күн бұрын
@TinyGiraffes I'm not that brave and don't know what else I might be damaging not to mention what that may do to my warranty. I have heard a little bit about some kind of new anode rod that helps at some level, but I don't know. Enough to comment intellectually about
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 16 күн бұрын
Right on!
@Steven_Wolfe
@Steven_Wolfe Ай бұрын
Awesome video. I thoroughly enjoy evaluating water and airflow climate dynamics.
@damon-burton
@damon-burton Ай бұрын
This is a great introduction to your book, "How to be a Home Inspector Badass." Your passion for the industry is evident. I'm particularly interested in the tips for building credibility. As a new home inspector, establishing trust with clients is crucial. I wish you all the best with your book and your continued success.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections Ай бұрын
Thanks so much Damon, we really really appreciate the kudos!
@damon-burton
@damon-burton Ай бұрын
@@homeinspections You're very welcome. Your book is a valuable resource for newcomers. Wishing you even more success, it’s well-deserved.
@blahblahbitch23
@blahblahbitch23 2 ай бұрын
I’m in FL, and trying to figure out the best places to become certified and get my start. Would love some advice!
@dandanholmes2365
@dandanholmes2365 2 ай бұрын
I’d suspect it was urination from the ac tune up
@yourgooglemeister6745
@yourgooglemeister6745 3 ай бұрын
Talk about a scam industry. Your contract that releases you from ANY liability is longer than your actual reports. BUNCH OF SCUMBAGS!
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 3 ай бұрын
@yourgooglemeister6745 understood and sorry you had a bad experience . Any industry must have a way to limit liability. No business can be a business, a warranty company and an insurance company without charging an amount that would exceed its value. In the inspection industry, an inspector can only help you manage and limit your risk but cannot guarantee against the risk. That's where warranty and insurance comes into play. If you had an extremely egregious event, that's when you would consult an attorney.
@yourgooglemeister6745
@yourgooglemeister6745 3 ай бұрын
@homeinspections BS! You damn well know you can put out just about anything in your report, knowing nothing's going to come back on you. Every single other industry has some liability as to what they produce and put out to the public. Yours doesn't that says everything about it! And more people need to know that
@ChrisWard64658
@ChrisWard64658 3 ай бұрын
Nice, thanks for the tips.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 3 ай бұрын
@ChrisWard64658 any time
@damon-burton
@damon-burton 3 ай бұрын
I never thought about how water damage can be so similar in both scenarios. It's a great reminder of the importance of proper water management around homes. I've seen firsthand the devastation that water can cause, so it's crucial to be proactive and address potential issues before they become major problems. Thanks for sharing.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 3 ай бұрын
@damon-burton we really appreciate that thanks for watching Damon!
@damon-burton
@damon-burton 3 ай бұрын
@@homeinspections You're welcome. Keep it up.
@VictorBarcelona-w1d
@VictorBarcelona-w1d 3 ай бұрын
Its helpful thanks
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 3 ай бұрын
@@VictorBarcelona-w1d thanks for watching!
@FloridaSlayer
@FloridaSlayer 4 ай бұрын
What gets me is everyone is blaming climate change for all these flash floods and towns getting flooded that never got flooded. What was here 20-30 years ago that is here now? Millions upon millions of new houses that are sitting on ground that used to perk and absorb all that rain water. Hundreds of millions of acreage of soil (that acted like a sponge) gone and made into solid surfaces. The storm sewer systems were build for conditions 20-30 years ago. The water has no where to go. These towns just keep letting builders just build and build and they take that tax money and it goes right in their pockets. We have to stop building. I think that was a major part of the mass flooding in NC. All those new developments. Stay safe if your in Florida.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 4 ай бұрын
@@FloridaSlayer exactly my point Slayer, thanks for watching
@FloridaSlayer
@FloridaSlayer 4 ай бұрын
@@homeinspections I kind of figured that lol. Stay safe of there brother if your in the Orlando area. I'm up near Palatka and getting a ton of rain. Good luck
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 4 ай бұрын
@FloridaSlayer Oviedo to be specific. Just rain right now but hold on to your hat, it's gonna get worse. God bless and be careful!
@JorgeRodriguez-hm1ym
@JorgeRodriguez-hm1ym 5 ай бұрын
Hi, how thick the gasket should be between the grill and the ceiling?
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 5 ай бұрын
@JorgeRodriguez-hm1ym not sure but not sure it really matters. Can't be too thick, wouldn't fit. Not worth an argument
@damon-burton
@damon-burton 5 ай бұрын
Great video on swimming pool inspections. Your advice on SOPs and safety is valuable. Knowing about barrier systems and electrical safety is crucial. Thanks for sharing.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 5 ай бұрын
@damon-burton thanks for watching brother we appreciate you
@damon-burton
@damon-burton 5 ай бұрын
@@homeinspections You're welcome
@gemmrk
@gemmrk 5 ай бұрын
You use way too much corporate jargon. Why not use honest words that dont have double meeanings. Makes you sound disingenuous
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 5 ай бұрын
Your theory is clearly uninformed
@bevrbob
@bevrbob 5 ай бұрын
THANX BUDDY --
@charleshines5700
@charleshines5700 5 ай бұрын
I do have an attic that gets hot. It also gets really cold in there in the winter. Only on a cool overcast day is it ever really comfortable in there. It is just one of those attics that are never seen it is one of those ones you have to pull the ladder down and unfold it to get in there. It is not like a previous home I lived in that had a real set of stairs going up to it.
@natehartman5915
@natehartman5915 6 ай бұрын
what exactly are you referring to when you mentioned a membership in "top" with inspectors services group? I'm not finding this on Google or anywhere else. Can you point me in the right direction?
@JonBolton-yt2pf
@JonBolton-yt2pf 6 ай бұрын
TOP doesn't exist anymore. It was awesome back in the day when Nathan Thornberry owned it!
@damon-burton
@damon-burton 6 ай бұрын
SB 382 raises important questions. Experience is valuable, but education is crucial. Home buyers deserve thorough inspections. Balancing experience and education is key to maintaining industry trust.
@damon-burton
@damon-burton 6 ай бұрын
Google Earth Pro is a game-changer. Tracking roof repairs is brilliant. Could this be used for commercial properties too? Great demo
@JonBolton-yt2pf
@JonBolton-yt2pf 6 ай бұрын
Commercial jobs is all I do anymore so yes! Thanks for watching, we all appreciate it!
@damon-burton
@damon-burton 6 ай бұрын
@@JonBolton-yt2pf Thanks for the awesome content and insights. Looking forward to more videos.
@JonBolton-yt2pf
@JonBolton-yt2pf 6 ай бұрын
@@damon-burton you have no idea how much we appreciate that, thank you!
@damon-burton
@damon-burton 6 ай бұрын
@@JonBolton-yt2pf You're welcome.
@damon-burton
@damon-burton 6 ай бұрын
This moisture intrusion course is timely. Solid SOPs are crucial for hurricane season.
@JonBolton-yt2pf
@JonBolton-yt2pf 6 ай бұрын
Thank you!!!
@damon-burton
@damon-burton 6 ай бұрын
@@JonBolton-yt2pf You're welcome.
@AaronPowellvox
@AaronPowellvox 7 ай бұрын
As a heating and air guy we like to get a bucket of mastic and take the brush and seal the seam between the Sheetrock and the boot to prevent this being careful not to get the mastic on parts of the Sheetrock that the grill doesn’t cover. You can also use a good silicone.
@chris76-01
@chris76-01 7 ай бұрын
Usually just the 1 in the bathroom has condensation.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 7 ай бұрын
@@chris76-01 that would typically indicate excessive atmospheric moisture from inadequate ventilation
@Bmonkey85_
@Bmonkey85_ 7 ай бұрын
Got the same problem
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 7 ай бұрын
@Bmonkey85_ operate the exhaust fan during and after bathing for at least 10 minutes thereby reducing the amount of moisture in the air. Even invisible moisture will condense on a cooler metal surface like the supply grill
@Bmonkey85_
@Bmonkey85_ 7 ай бұрын
@@homeinspections ok
@billybassman21
@billybassman21 7 ай бұрын
I see this a lot in businesses especially restaurants. It's largely because they ran the fan constantly and when the compressor turns off the fan not only keeps running, but it continues to bring outside air in. On a humid day that humidity is coming in along with the water on the coil evaporating. There is also major swings in comfort levels. This is why two or more stages is important and having a system that closes the outside damper and turns the fan off between cycles on humid days. Also having overcooling and making use of the BK terminal to slow the fan speed down when it's humid. You would think this wouldn't be an issue by now, but it still is.
@groovy1937
@groovy1937 7 ай бұрын
I owned a restaurant for years. We always had sweaty ducts in our dining rooms when it became hot and humid. It was a struggle with the humidity coming in from the front doors constantly opening due to customer traffic. Kitchen exhaust hood - had make up air in the kitchen, but it still pulled in air from all over. I ran dehumidifiers when we closed to try and dry the air before the next day - it would help. This only was an issue in Summer and high humid days. Lots to running a restaurant besides cooking quality food. You have to be a jack of all trades. I know HVAC very well now.
@bsrsonptyltd5854
@bsrsonptyltd5854 7 ай бұрын
Wow absolutely now how to. Unless you mean sign up for our course.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 7 ай бұрын
Education is absolutely recommended. Good news, quick payback on investment that keeps on returning.
@Christabellaluxx
@Christabellaluxx 7 ай бұрын
Hi I have a first floor kitchen duct sweating and about 3 feet away from duct on bring is a water spot forming would cutting drywall be only option as line is in between floors? Thanks
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 7 ай бұрын
My guess is the stain is a low spot where water is accumulated and soaking through. Could there be fungal growth above that, of course. When you go, cutting out, The Dry wall. Ceiling, you start to expose that and anything else that is in that confined space to the conditioned space. I would first remove the metal supply diffuser. And make sure that boot is tight and sealed, then reinstall the metal diffuser and see if that helps because it sounds like it's a simple mixture of warmer air and colder air
@drumswest5035
@drumswest5035 8 ай бұрын
In my area, the engineer of record ( EOR) is responsible for doing the final inspection of any shear walls and structural components.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 8 ай бұрын
Wish I could say the same. Where are you located?
@drumswest5035
@drumswest5035 6 ай бұрын
@@homeinspectionsup in British Columbia, Canada, its a very high seismic zone, so our engineers dont want to take any chances with builders making mistakes as the engineer takes liability
@Louie_n_Poppy
@Louie_n_Poppy 8 ай бұрын
This saved me a lot of time and money! Thanks!
@BizzaroBrainBoi
@BizzaroBrainBoi 8 ай бұрын
since 1998?!?!?!?!??
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 8 ай бұрын
Yes sir.
@AProHomeDamon
@AProHomeDamon 9 ай бұрын
There are so many changes every year with construction materials, design, and failing systems from the past. For example masonite siding or PEX pipe. Without CE, these types of things will get a pass and the public will be the victim of lazy ass people ( like their not already)
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 9 ай бұрын
I think you nailed it
@knhinspections8652
@knhinspections8652 9 ай бұрын
How does anyone think this is a good idea?
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 9 ай бұрын
LOL
@joeeggfromleigh
@joeeggfromleigh 9 ай бұрын
Seems like it will just push the clients to go back to seeking those with professional association memberships, most with much higher CE requisites, like before senseless government regulation. The state just wants the fees, not the administrative work...
@Aimbot95
@Aimbot95 9 ай бұрын
Great video, Jon!
@JonBolton-yt2pf
@JonBolton-yt2pf 9 ай бұрын
Thank you!!!
@michaelmike5709
@michaelmike5709 9 ай бұрын
Great channel, but stop being cheap by yourself a laser pointer stop using this annoying tape measure and get a real good lens for your camera. Your information is phenomenal. Your presentation is horrific. This is to elevate you not to put you down. You have a wonderful super channel, however self sabotaging.
@AProHomeDamon
@AProHomeDamon 9 ай бұрын
It's a great investment in your education as an inspector. I went through it and learned stuff that i never even thought about for inspecting pools.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 9 ай бұрын
Awesomeness that really makes our day!!!
@roberthernandez2363
@roberthernandez2363 9 ай бұрын
What software do you recommend
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 9 ай бұрын
I recommend you try several and determine what's best for you. Most software companies will allow you to try them for free for a short trial period
@larrybrewer5635
@larrybrewer5635 10 ай бұрын
I'm a Mortgage Loan officers in Indiana & Florida ,interested on how anyone is doing in these States before I take that step.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 10 ай бұрын
Tough time to start a home inspection business, I would highly recommend joining a team.
@tbfishing2404
@tbfishing2404 10 ай бұрын
I’m in California.
@tbfishing2404
@tbfishing2404 10 ай бұрын
Good afternoon John , my name is josue silva , I’m a certified home inspector but my employer sold the co . And I’m looking to go on my own and need advice on purchasing an insurance, Any advice on an insurance is appreciated . Thank you in advance.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 10 ай бұрын
Inspector Pro! That's an easy one!!! Tell Will Colton I said Hi
@BeautyB33
@BeautyB33 10 ай бұрын
loved this video 😅
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 10 ай бұрын
Thank you so much
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 10 ай бұрын
Thank you so much
@in4theride75
@in4theride75 11 ай бұрын
You should run your audio through a noise suppression filter.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 11 ай бұрын
Sounds fine when I play it
@in4theride75
@in4theride75 10 ай бұрын
@@homeinspectionsIf you like the sound of white noise in your audio by all means keep doing what you're doing.
@johnhaller5851
@johnhaller5851 11 ай бұрын
I wish inspectors would recommend other tests outside your scope, and say that testing is highly unlikely to break working components. My Realtor recommended against hydrostatic testing of the sewer lines because I would be responsible if the testing caused any damage. I live where most of the houses have cast iron sewer pipes under the slab, and when they rust out, it can cost $40,000 to dig under the house to replace this pipes. The test only fills the sewer with water, and checks that it doesn't drain significantly until a test ball is removed. A list of other tests you don't perform along with some suggested people, and the things those tests may find and the cost to fix them would be very helpful. Pool equipment is another area where leaky pipes can be expensive to fix.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 11 ай бұрын
Very good points, this happens to inspectors often. We test a GFCI with the button and if it doesn't reset, they want us to pay for an electrician to replace. We even got set up one time... When the inspector opened the microwave, the handle fell off. The seller screamed at our inspector and demanded a new microwave. As he stood there stunned and looked at the handle. The glue was still wet!
@maubunky1
@maubunky1 11 ай бұрын
Both home inspectors from my previous 2 houses damaged things without any reasonable excuse. The first one was a 3 year old house. He had neglected to turn the shower valve all the way off after "testing to see if the shower worked". Instead of shutting it off all the way, he left the handle a few degrees off from center....and left a steady stream of water running for 24 hours and we had very hard (calcium carbonate) city water. As a result, when I went to shut off the shower valve all the way, it still dripped continuously for the first time ever. Replacing the o-ring, the valve, and generously lubeing it with silicone grease didn't help, as he had allowed a channel of calcium deposits to form inside the shower valve body, requiring $300 to replace the shower valve body. The second home the inspector broke the gas fireplace on/off switch because he didn't know the correct direction to push it. He jammed it so hard in the wrong direction that it completely broke into pieces. He had the nerve to say that it was already broken. I knew this was false because I had just gone through and tested that exact fireplace because the entire time we lived there I never used that fireplace so I wanted to be sure the gas valve was turned back on and the pilot light plumbing was cleared of air (it takes a long time to light it when you haven't used it in awhile.) and fired up that fireplace before he came. This was the same home inspector that cost me $400 because he claimed that there was terrain leaning toward my foundation and that water could get into the basement. 10 years before (after I bought the house) I had noticed a 12 inch puddle after a heavy rain and hired a contractor to regrade the area and there was never any more settling there (The house was already 10 years old when I bought it) and there was never again any small water puddle on the bare concrete floor there after a rain. And yet even after I told him this he still wrote me up and the buyer asked me to provide receipts that I corrected it. You should have seen the look of disbelief when I hired a separate contractor who came out and looked and said "This is perfectly fine the way it is...if you want me to come here and add some dirt and look as if I did something that really doesn't need to be done, it'll cost you $400". A 3rd moronic home inspector told me (when buying my current house) that I had a completely defective door that needed to be entirely replaced because it didn't close properly. It took me all of 5 minutes of tightening the door knob hardware (It was an outside solid oak door that was susceptible to loosening of hardware with the changing of humidity from very cold winters to very humid summers). He was shocked that I was able to fix it so easily so that the door closed properly. This same inspector never reported that 4 light switches in the main living room all needed to be replaced because they were all on the same circuit and they were each malfunctioning. All he said was "I can't figure out what these light switches are for." If you ask me, home inspectors are fantastical idiots, they have never caught anything that I wasn't already aware of, they break things, and they don't catch things that really should have been caught. My dad was a realtor and home builder for 50 years, and every homeowner that ever got a pre-inspection of their own, and whose buyer got their own different inspection with a different company, or if the deal fell through and subsequent buyers hired different inspectors, they all came up with a list of completely different items, none of which were real. Your profession is full of a bunch of know-nothing crooks.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 11 ай бұрын
Well, I can't argue that it's a pretty low bar. And pretty easy to obtain a license if one is even required. So I see where you coming from and can empathize. You really have to do your homework when choosing a home inspector
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 11 ай бұрын
Thanks for the stories!
@BrianW211
@BrianW211 11 ай бұрын
I sold a rental property a few years ago. The buyer's inspector called out that the breaker for the A/C was 50A while the fuse for the A/C (at the unit) was only 30A. He claimed they should be the same. I tried to tell him that the breaker is intended to protect the wiring and the fuse is intended to protect the equipment. I even pointed out specific text in the NEC. The inspector argued back and forth with me and the only argument he could give is that they should match. The buyer's realtor finally just said "Replace it. It's only $15". So I did, reluctantly. The realtor was right. At the time, I was a professional engineer earning over $100/hr at my day job. I just wanted the deal to go through. Replacing the breaker wouldn't really hurt anything. Worst case, it would just force somebody to open up the panel and check the wiring and possibly change out the breaker again the next time a new AC unit was installed. It definitely wasn't worth my time to argue with somebody that is paid to understand building code, but obviously doesn't.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 11 ай бұрын
Wow, that stinks, it sounds like a uneducated inspector however, building code is one thing that is not required training to be a home inspector the bar is much lower than that. I sure wouldn't argue with an engineer that knew how to read the nEC LOL and certainly wouldn't tell you to just make it go away.
@BrianW211
@BrianW211 11 ай бұрын
@@homeinspections At the time, I did some research to see if there was some reason he reported it. I found a post on a home inspector website forum where another inspector asked the question about whether they should be the same and then another inspector responded that he didn't know but always calls it out. 😥
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 11 ай бұрын
There ya , uneducated. And reliant upon someone's word without the verification of education or research. Ugh.
@BrianW211
@BrianW211 11 ай бұрын
My next-door neighbors sold their house in January 2024. The breaker boxes in our neighborhood are surface mounted on the outside of the house. I saw the inspector had removed the interior panel of the breaker box so he could see the wiring. There are only 2 screws that hold the panel in place. Late in the evening several hours after the inspector left, I saw the breaker box door was open. I tried to close it but couldn't. I told my neighbor about it and we looked at it together and saw that both screws were missing on the interior panel cover, and neither screw was anywhere to be found. We took the screws out of my breaker box to see what size they were, then we found some appropriate replacements, and went to re-install them. It took a little bit of pressure on the box in the right place to get the screws holes to line up, but it wasn't difficult, and the box closed just fine after that. Is that damage? Maybe. It's bordering on negligent. I'm a retired engineer and I have no tolerance for that kind of behavior.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 11 ай бұрын
Yeah that Just sounds irresponsible, at least was a cheap fix. Thanks for commenting!
@Kilnor
@Kilnor 11 ай бұрын
Engineered trusses shouldn't be altered at all without a structural engineer signing off on it.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 11 ай бұрын
Amen
@machintelligence
@machintelligence 11 ай бұрын
Many years ago I did a few home inspections, mostly for friends and customers of my remodel business. Checking under a sink, I noticed corrosion on the bottom of a "P" trap under a sink. I informed the customer. who was with me on the inspection, that the trap metal looked awfully thin. I pushed on it with my thumb and the chrome plating, which was the only metal remaining as the brass had all been worn away, crumbled in my hand. I apologized profusely and did an emergency repair with tape.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 11 ай бұрын
That sucks But you know what? At least they were made aware of the problem and could proactively fix it before it had a continuous drip leak in damaged the cabinet
@saigyl9149
@saigyl9149 11 ай бұрын
those chrome traps are guaranteed to crumble if a feather touches it
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 11 ай бұрын
Which is why we rarely see them anymore, they've all failed and been replaced by plastic
@IAQJosh
@IAQJosh 11 ай бұрын
Great video! Completely agree with your thought process.
@homeinspections
@homeinspections 11 ай бұрын
Thanks Josh!