Originally posted by slowturbocar
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Shoddy construction found after Rowlett/Garland Tornados
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I'm sorry but if you're saying if quality materials and skilled labor do not produce a stronger product then youre just fucking stupid.Last edited by FunFordCobra; 01-02-2016, 02:24 PM.Comment
A suggestion of one wood is baseless ok.. It was more of an example of how shitty and fast these houses are going up. Especially around the Garland/ Rowlett area on I30. That was part of the I30 condo scam in the 80s if you knew anything and further supports my claim of shitty materials and labor trying to get people in and make money back on land that was flipped around multiple times before ONE apartment was on it.
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Originally posted by Sgt Beavis View PostI think we're going to hear a lot more about this in the coming weeks. We were discussing this in an earlier tornado thread but I thought this can stand on its own. I wonder if North Texas towns will update their building codes. As I said before, building codes are the minimum standard. However that doesn't mean the minimum standard has to be pitiful.
It looks like some builders aren't even following that minimum standard. Will they and the building inspectors be held accountible? It was very fortunate that there were no kids in the school mentioned in this article. We would have had a helluva lot more fatalities if there were.
http://www.dallasnews.com/news/commu...o-wreckage.ece
Originally posted by FunFordCobra View PostLike I said they need to stop using this shitty wood!
Originally posted by juiceweezl View PostWood is graded and stamped. It's not the wood. As was stated, the code is a minimum standard, but the problem is that houses aren't even built to that. I promise you that 99% of the houses built in NTX do not meet the minimum requirements for wall bracing. That is the lateral resistance element in the home, and it leads to failures during wind events. In fact, the majority of drywall cracks you see in homes that get attributed to 'bad soil' are due to a lack of bracing. You can find non-compliance in just about every home, especially those with great rooms and tons of windows.
Originally posted by GhostTX View PostWell, duh, you use illegals to build houses instead of carpenters and this is what you get. Further, you rush to complete the jobs as plug-n-chug housing by volume, and short cuts are gonna happen.
Originally posted by snacksnack View Postwouldn't this fall back on the architect?
Originally posted by FunFordCobra View PostJust use wood a real man would use
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Maybe codes and standards are different in home construction than those im use to in mechanical engineering, but passing the minimum requirements would not indicate a poor product by any measure of the imagination. Are construction standards really that low? Who dictates these standards?
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Originally posted by Ruffdaddy View PostMaybe codes and standards are different in home construction than those im use to in mechanical engineering, but passing the minimum requirements would not indicate a poor product by any measure of the imagination. Are construction standards really that low? Who dictates these standards?
Everyone here (including myself) do not spec houses and do the engineering on houses, so what do we actually know. Everyone seems to think more wood is better when its not. Properly engineered framing with smaller wood stock is much better than just throwing a bulk of materials at a job because it was the rule of thumb.
One last thing... I havent read the article yet, but are houses designed to withstand tornados? NO. The picture of the school wall falling down while everything else is fine shows shoddy work, but if we expect a wood structure to survive a tornado, that is crazy.
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Originally posted by FunFordCobra View PostI'm sorry but if you're saying if quality materials and skilled labor do not produce a stronger product then youre just fucking stupid.Originally posted by FunFordCobra View PostA suggestion of one wood is baseless ok.. It was more of an example of how shitty and fast these houses are going up. Especially around the Garland/ Rowlett area on I30. That was part of the I30 condo scam in the 80s if you knew anything and further supports my claim of shitty materials and labor trying to get people in and make money back on land that was flipped around multiple times before ONE apartment was on it.
http://www.dallasnews.com/news/20120...dead-at-79.ece
Or, maybe you couldn't come up with a reasonable domestic solution for your claim that my company uses sub par materials to construct our homes. So you had to reach way back to divert the attention from your assinine comment.
I work for one of the highest regarded production home builders in the state. Not only from an industry stand point but from a buyer stand point as well.
So, I was honestly interested in your opinion about the poor quality of lumber that it seemed that you were implying that we are using. Though I realized that you were probably full of shit once several members asked you to clarify until finally you brough up some kind of exotic lumber.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using TapatalkOriginally posted by LeahBest balls I've had in my mouth in a while.
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Could have sworn I already posted this, but the wife and I visited our house twice a week when it was being built and had our contact for Dr Hortons builder manager. Basically us visiting twice a week and my wife nagging the Dr Horton builder rep while the work crews were there made them spend a little more time to get things right
Like when our straight case was being built my wife didn't like that 3 different pieces of wood had cracks in them so they were replaced. She didn't like how they divided our pantry and kitchen walls and she took measurements from the model home we visited and made them re make the structure to how she wanted it, or how far the pantry was suppose to be into the kitchen.
Now the other side of it is the spec homes being built around us. There were several completed in 3 months time spans and we saw lots of issues with quality and more noticeably spec measurements were being eyeballed. One of the spec houses with the same floor plan as ours was 8 feet narrower on the foundation and the inside of the house. No one else probably notices to this day, but having lived and built our house the wife and I immediately walked in and felt something major off
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TIL: You can lack any sort of reading comprehension and still be a computer gamer.
What you said:
Originally posted by FunFordCobra View PostLike I said they need to stop using this shitty wood!Originally posted by FunFordCobra View PostJust use wood a real man would useOriginally posted by FunFordCobra View Postlets just say if all those homes were build of quebracho the tornado woulda cried.. I'm willing to bet those homes were busted out in a month or so too with cheap products and labor.Originally posted by FunFordCobra View Postmaybe for the lower class... enjoy your plywood.Originally posted by FunFordCobra View Postdidn't see that. all I know is that if people didn't use such shitty wood Rowlett would still be here.Originally posted by FunFordCobra View PostI'm sorry but if you're saying if quality materials and skilled labor do not produce a stronger product then youre just fucking stupid.
And the the point the article was making:
“We saw a tremendous number of improper attachment of the walls to the foundations, which just made walls fall either in or out“Walls not attached properly, and they’re just falling down like a house of cards.”Marshall said he toured the damaged school with school officials this week, and he was shocked by the lack of proper attachments linking the walls to the rest of the structure.Someone “tried to nail a steel bottom plate to the concrete,” he said. “There was no connection [between] walls, there was no connection at the roof, and it was simply nailed to the concrete foundation. That’s not going to cut it in my book, and it won’t cut it in any [building] code I know.Marshall posted a photo of the damaged school on his Facebook page this week, commenting that the walls “were in essence free-standing.” The post drew dozens of comments and attracted notice from experts in his field.“The vast majority of houses we looked at did not have proper attachments,” Marshall said Wednesday. “It didn’t matter what size of house. It didn’t matter what city it was in.”Many of the improvements are as simple as attaching walls to structures securely, Simmons said.
There really needs to be more accountability in this world for spewing uninformed nonsense.
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Originally posted by FunFordCobra View Postlets just say if all those homes were build of quebracho the tornado woulda cried.. I'm willing to bet those homes were busted out in a month or so too with cheap products and labor.
Originally posted by Ruffdaddy View PostMaybe codes and standards are different in home construction than those im use to in mechanical engineering, but passing the minimum requirements would not indicate a poor product by any measure of the imagination. Are construction standards really that low? Who dictates these standards?Originally posted by DennyGood questions. I wish Randy (Vertnut) was still around. He seemed pretty knowledgeable on that subject.
As for who dictates the standards, well, today it's everyone. Builders put the first code together to level the playing field from a cost perspective. Today, proposals are written by individuals or committees (composed of builders, code officials, manufacturers, lobbying groups, etc.). Everyone has a say, and it becomes give and take during votes to decide what goes in or comes out.
Originally posted by 8mpg View PostI dont think so... I honestly think code is fine. I think many people here would want and try to overbuild everything. The code is an international building code that has been researched, engineered, tested, etc. I think a lot of ignorance makes people believe they need bigger pieces of wood than they need. 2x4 framing vs 2x6, engineered trusses vs stick built rafters. The thought of hardwood studs is insane due to the cost.
Everyone here (including myself) do not spec houses and do the engineering on houses, so what do we actually know. Everyone seems to think more wood is better when its not. Properly engineered framing with smaller wood stock is much better than just throwing a bulk of materials at a job because it was the rule of thumb.
One last thing... I havent read the article yet, but are houses designed to withstand tornados? NO. The picture of the school wall falling down while everything else is fine shows shoddy work, but if we expect a wood structure to survive a tornado, that is crazy.
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Cool, thanks for the detailed info. That definitely is disappointing to hear.
Side note: The standards i use are mostly ASME, API, ANSI...or similar. They are typically very solid, and often over engineered. It sucks that my house most likely doesnt come close to what i should expect.
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Originally posted by FunFordCobra View PostBecause this dfwmustangs is just soo full of people at the height at their profession, also the utmost authority in what they THINK they do well, and everyone is a millionaire. I get it. I've been here since 2001. This site should run for president.Originally posted by PGreenCobraI can't get over the fact that you get to go live the rest of your life, knowing that someone made a Halloween costume out of you. LMAO!!Originally posted by Trip McNeelyOriginally posted by dsrtuckteezydont downshift!!
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