I had my grandparents’ house inspected before buying it, and the inspector said that a couple of the springs (same type) were not installed correctly; that the extra cable coming from the door to the track was supposed to be routed through the spring to hold it in place in case there was a failure. The garage doors were already concerning me, so I hired a garage door company to take a look, and update the springs.
The technician told me that an inspector pointing that out is really strange, because that’s an incredibly niche detail for an inspector to know. The tech looks at the spring, checks out the garage door, etc. All the while, I’m standing under the track. The tech was about to open the garage door, and said, “hey, take a few steps back. No reason to risk standing under that, in case it fails.” I took three steps back, and then there was a loud bang, and the spring suddenly whipped across in front of me, bounced back once, and then lazily swung back and forth in front of me.
I still sometimes panic walking under my garage door tracks.
I’m glad to know that! I’ve only inspected and purchased my grandparents’ home, and I hope to live here the rest of my life, so I don’t really know what to expect from inspectors. I only know what I’ve been told.
I had my grandparents’ house inspected before buying it, and the inspector said that a couple of the springs (same type) were not installed correctly; that the extra cable coming from the door to the track was supposed to be routed through the spring to hold it in place in case there was a failure. The garage doors were already concerning me, so I hired a garage door company to take a look, and update the springs.
The technician told me that an inspector pointing that out is really strange, because that’s an incredibly niche detail for an inspector to know. The tech looks at the spring, checks out the garage door, etc. All the while, I’m standing under the track. The tech was about to open the garage door, and said, “hey, take a few steps back. No reason to risk standing under that, in case it fails.” I took three steps back, and then there was a loud bang, and the spring suddenly whipped across in front of me, bounced back once, and then lazily swung back and forth in front of me.
I still sometimes panic walking under my garage door tracks.
That’s not at all a niche detail. An inspector who fails to call that out is completely incompetent.
I’m glad to know that! I’ve only inspected and purchased my grandparents’ home, and I hope to live here the rest of my life, so I don’t really know what to expect from inspectors. I only know what I’ve been told.