Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Things you want to check: electricity and plumbing. This will be your biggest expense. I was the lucky one to buy a 1920s house and be told all was good by the home inspector only to find bootleg grounded outlets and knob and tube in the walls. $25k to fix. Just the electricity not the new drywall. Months later my sewer line collapsed and I was told had a huge tree root in it and was probably like that for years leaking underground. $15k for that one.
How could there be knob and tube in the walls but a modern circuit box?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Things you want to check: electricity and plumbing. This will be your biggest expense. I was the lucky one to buy a 1920s house and be told all was good by the home inspector only to find bootleg grounded outlets and knob and tube in the walls. $25k to fix. Just the electricity not the new drywall. Months later my sewer line collapsed and I was told had a huge tree root in it and was probably like that for years leaking underground. $15k for that one.
How could there be knob and tube in the walls but a modern circuit box?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m confused by the post.
Every 1920s home that exists has been renovated by either the homeowners or a contractor in the business of renovating or flipping.
In my experience, the homes that have just been renovated by owners end up with bigger problems than the flippers.
In particular, homes where the owner has lived in it for 50 years are the biggest red flags. For whatever reason, owners from the 1960s - 1980s were the worst in terms of doing non-permitted work and other cheap fixes.
Our neighbor built an entire 2-story addition and he joked it was a “20 year addition”…he did it on the cheap and wasn’t expected to last more than 20 years.
He passed away and sure enough the new owners tore it down and built a proper addition.
I know this by experience…my home is 130 years old but it’s only the stuff that was “updated” in the 70s/80s that’s scary! It’s like people lost their minds during that period— and probably the bad economy didn’t help.
Anonymous wrote:I’m confused by the post.
Every 1920s home that exists has been renovated by either the homeowners or a contractor in the business of renovating or flipping.
In my experience, the homes that have just been renovated by owners end up with bigger problems than the flippers.
In particular, homes where the owner has lived in it for 50 years are the biggest red flags. For whatever reason, owners from the 1960s - 1980s were the worst in terms of doing non-permitted work and other cheap fixes.
Our neighbor built an entire 2-story addition and he joked it was a “20 year addition”…he did it on the cheap and wasn’t expected to last more than 20 years.
He passed away and sure enough the new owners tore it down and built a proper addition.
Anonymous wrote:Things you want to check: electricity and plumbing. This will be your biggest expense. I was the lucky one to buy a 1920s house and be told all was good by the home inspector only to find bootleg grounded outlets and knob and tube in the walls. $25k to fix. Just the electricity not the new drywall. Months later my sewer line collapsed and I was told had a huge tree root in it and was probably like that for years leaking underground. $15k for that one.
Anonymous wrote:Things you want to check: electricity and plumbing. This will be your biggest expense. I was the lucky one to buy a 1920s house and be told all was good by the home inspector only to find bootleg grounded outlets and knob and tube in the walls. $25k to fix. Just the electricity not the new drywall. Months later my sewer line collapsed and I was told had a huge tree root in it and was probably like that for years leaking underground. $15k for that one.
Anonymous wrote:Too many variables. I have a 1920s house that was renovated by a previous owner but to high standards. I've seen excellent "flips" and terrible flips.
Have an excellent home inspector walk you through the house and study everything carefully.