Last week something happened during an inspection that had never happened to me before. At first I thought it was a slight brain fade moment. A few seconds later, it was more of "wait a sec" moment. Then it turned into a full 'OH CRAP" moment.

During the course of inspecting a house, I flush the toilets, turn on sink faucets, run the tubs and active the shower diverters. It's just part of checking out the fixtures and the drains. It's a pretty common policy not to turn water valves such as main shut off valves and fixture shut off valves. If they haven't been used for a while, they might just decided to start leaking when you turn them, or break. I don't operate valves for that reason.

However, I do operate tub and shower controls. I check to make sure the HOT water is on the correct side, there are no leaks, and they shut off without continuous dripping. I've done this for close to twenty years.

So here I was in the 40+ year old house checking the bathrooms. I got to the master shower and turned on the left faucet and waited for the hot water to flow. The I turned on the right faucet and let it run a while so I could check the drain. After flushing the toilet a few times and running the sink to check functional flow, I went to turn off the shower.

So I turned the faucets "righty tighty" and the oddest thing happened, the shower kept running. "Oh, OK" (here's the brain fade moment), maybe one of the faucets was reversed ("I don't remember that, but, well, maybe"), so I turn them the other way, then one after the other. The water was still running. The time between the "wait a sec" and the "OH CRAP" is really just a fraction of a second. The water is NOT shutting off.

I now go down to the basement and turn off the water to the house at the main valve. Good thing for me, it was a newer lever valve and shut off fine. My next stop would have been the meter in the front yard.

I have a pretty good idea what happened. Either the screw (that holds the washer) has come off the end of the valve stem, or the stem itself has broken. Either way, it's going to be a call to a plumber to get it fixed before the water get turned on again.

The good thing is the house is vacant. 

While I have had my share of shower diverters shoot out of the fixture when I push the button, or faucet handles that leak like crazy, I have never had one not shut off.

Just goes to show you - always be ready for the unexpected.

 

 
Post is included in group: Tennessee Home and Building Inspectors
Post is included in group: Independent Thinking Inspectors
Post is included in group: Home Inspectors across the country
Post is included in group: Ask the Home Inspector
Post is included in group: ASHI

9 Comments on That pesky "Oh Crap" moment

MAR
29
1 Featured Post

Ok Jack,

You are in trouble now.  YOU broke their perfectly good faucet that , of course, was working just fine before you touched it. Now you get to re-plumb the entire house for them. You are so incompetent you should be locked up!

LOL,

Dana

10:12am • #1
135,426 Points 1 Featured Post

Jack- This is why we need inspectors! How upsetting would it have been if the new family in the house found this out for themselves? Glad you were able to avoid disaster.

10:38am • #2
8 Featured Posts Outside Blog

Good thing you knew what you were doing ! I would have panicked and not known how to turn off the water. Glad you caught it - can you imagine the person who bought the house going to use the shower for the first time and not being able to turn it off! Yikes. KH

11:03am • #3

I truly, sincerely hate it when that happens.  Never had it in the tub, but I have had it in the lavatory with client watching.  The old "Now what are you going to do" look on the clients face gave me a serious brain glitch.

8:38pm • #4
MAR
30

Knock on wood, I haven't had any valves fail on me yet. I have had the chain break on toilet that leads from the handle to the flapper valve.

8:08am • #5

Jack, I hope you don't get a water bill from the city. :)

12:19pm • #6

Tad,

I went down in the basement and shut off the main water valve.

12:53pm • #7
APR
05
179,354 Points Outside Blog

Never know what is going to break when and vacant houses seem to have their share of breakable items.

3:03pm • #8

Your story reminds me of a story from an associate of mine. He was holding an open house at a vacant property. So in preparation he turned on the lights, rinsed out the sinks and flushed the toilets. Then to his horror the toilet in the master bathroom began over flowing! Luckily, he is a very prepared person and he ran to his car to get a toilet plunger and a roll of paper towels. After struggling to fix the toilet and clean up the mess with one roll of paper towels, he then realized he had to sit through an open house still! I'm sure the whole time he was questioning why in the world he was in the business of selling homes!

3:13pm • #9

Leave a response…



(optional)
What does the graphic say?
 
Rainmaker_large

Jack Feldmann

Knoxville, TN

More about me…

Clayton Inspection Service, Inc.

Address: Knoxville, TN

Office Phone: (865) 693-7109

Email Me



Links

Archives

RSS 2.0 Feed for this blog

Find TN real estate agents and Knoxville real estate on ActiveRain.