
8 July 2015 | 10 replies
in them;All the trim (baseboards, casings, window boxes) were unsalvageable;14' of the sill plate along the rear wall and 12' along the front wall had to be replaced - this was the big discovery which put us in framing mode for a few days in-between snow storms.We discovered that the vapour barrier was, for the most part, ineffective due to poor installation - the insulation looked like a tired air filter in a shop vac.

28 November 2014 | 15 replies
For me a $20 toilet plus a $20 innards kit plus my time to mess with finding and installing it costs more than a Lowes toilet that gets delivered with me sending an email.

9 December 2014 | 3 replies
Selling to an owner occupant, not an investor, you'll be in violation of several federal laws as you proposed the transaction/If you "stay in" some installment purchase, you can only sell the interest you hold, to a less degree, in other words, if you don't hold title buying on an installment contract, you could lease it and grant an option to buy, you can't sell on a sub-2 basis as you don't own it.If you assign an installment contract, you must have the original seller's consent, you can't create an assumption of a unilateral contract without consent.

14 December 2014 | 3 replies
The neighbor has an identical configuration and installed drains so the water would go into the main drain of the house.

26 December 2014 | 6 replies
In CO our corners are placed using rebar, so a metal detector is the best way to find them.

23 December 2014 | 46 replies
One of my wealthy investor buddies was telling me tales of his friend that is one of the heads of The Teacher's Retirement System of Texas.

1 April 2015 | 4 replies
Was thinking to install one in student housing to cut on the water usage.
8 January 2015 | 32 replies
We have them installed under/next to dishwashers, washing machines, water heaters etc.

29 January 2015 | 28 replies
I have been in sales, advertising and media planning for the last 12 years.My husband was in the construction battalion (sea-bees) in the Navy and is a master inspector in Concrete and Metal construction.

23 January 2015 | 17 replies
With your license you have choices in California The CA Dept of RE is very strict about you talking to Seller about their house problemOnce you have your license you can1 buy on sub 2 and a note2 buy on a wrap - all inclusive trust deed3 buy on a lease w option, then sandwhich or assign4 buy on an installment sale if no liens5 do a jv with a seller if minor rehab6 do a option flip7 list itListen to what Bill Gulley said please.