Be careful or they may come in with a sawzall and cut the 2" clearance out of the wood.
That's what the inspector said!
Be careful or they may come in with a sawzall and cut the 2" clearance out of the wood.
That's what the inspector said!
I don't know exactly what that wood beam is supporting, maybe nothing, but I'm pretty sure cutting the clearance out of it would have been a much safer resolution than what I see now.
I'm not seeing that. I've never seen a top plate on a 45 deg angle before. Also, most structural support beams will be sitting vertical, not on an angle.It appears to be the top plate of the wall.
You would not believe the expletive of a witch I am having to deal with from this company.
It appears that the roof decking is laying directly on top of it. Could it be some sort of gabled end???I'm not seeing that. I've never seen a top plate on a 45 deg angle before. Also, most structural support beams will be sitting vertical, not on an angle.
Suggestion - don't get into a pizzing contest - at least not yet. Get the full report from the inspector and then gently lay it on her desk and say "it didn't pass inspection". Fix it.It's a husband wife team ownership. It's the wife that answers the phone. She is an idiot, and a huge expletive.
I'm not seeing that. I've never seen a top plate on a 45 deg angle before. Also, most structural support beams will be sitting vertical, not on an angle.
Edit. To me it looks like you could cut the 2" into the corner of that (beam, plate, whatever) and get your clearance without any significant structural or integral harm.
Suggestion - don't get into a pizzing contest - at least not yet. Get the full report from the inspector and then gently lay it on her desk and say "it didn't pass inspection". Fix it.
Hard to tell just from those pictures what that bean is all about, but because it's on an angle if you cut into it you'd just be cutting out the corner, rather than cutting all the way through the beam, so even if you cut into it 2" you wouldn't be removing that much material and wouldn't be weakening it very much at all.
My guess is that is exactly how that one issue will get fixed.
Be careful. Get the inspector to give a detailed, written report of what needs to change and the caveats. That way it is coming from an authority. Let the installer know that said inspector will be returning to inspect the final installation.
Have you done a background check on the installer? Is he licensed or certified?
Hard to tell just from those pictures what that bean is all about, but because it's on an angle if you cut into it you'd just be cutting out the corner, rather than cutting all the way through the beam, so even if you cut into it 2" you wouldn't be removing that much material and wouldn't be weakening it very much at all.
My guess is that is exactly how that one issue will get fixed.
He is going to be getting me one.
I did not do a background check on the installer. I have no idea if they are licensed or certified, but based on their work I am sure they are not. We were completely ignorant going into this, which I guess is our fault. I just feel like I can't be an expert in everything, that is what the experts are for. That's what my husband makes good money for, to pay other people to be good at what they do so they can do it for us when we don't know how. I think some one selling and installing wood stoves in homes should only be doing so because they capable. I never dreamed people can just go into people's homes and do it how ever they want, rules and regulations be damned. This whole thing has been a nightmare and completely shocking.
As for the chimney cleaning, sounds like you could use a telescoping connector or just drop the baffles on the stove and clean it bottom up.
I would ask the Fire Chief in your town to pay that merchant a visit and have him bring the pictures.Did the inspector give you a written report? If so, I'd take it right down to the shop in person and start questioning what happened since they were given 2 chances to get the job done right, and failed both times.
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