Hi all,
I bought my house last May and moved in in late June. About 2.5 weeks after moving in, during a very heavy rain storm, a leak developed in the my foyer ceiling. Pretty good leak, so I tore out the ceiling (which was perfectly flat/had no seams). Well, the water was coming in pretty good past the ceiling 2x8 joists and the subfloor above that that led to an attic space. The joist and subfloor above the ceiling were nicely discolored showing long-term saturation.
But it didn't look to be a patch job from what I could tell. And the buyer's disclosure didn't mention a history of a leak there.
Now, looking back, they knew exactly there was a history of an unfixed leak there. And I'm annoyed. So here's the story:
1. Leak formed as named above.
2. Tried to track it down and couldn't figure it out. Siding LOOKED fine (asbestos shingle). Then finally I realize that someone had put massive beads of caulk in the edge between the roof and a vertical wall of siding coming out of the roof. And the caulk changed colors/look several times - so they had tried to chase the leak down many times with thick beads of caulk.
3. Got the house re-sided and found out that somehow the water was getting behind the siding running right down the edge of the roof and going through a huge hole in the house sheathing. Ugh. Fixed!
4. Finally got up today to square off the ceiling hole (about 3x2') now that it's fully dried out so I can patch it and stop letting a massive air-leak occur up into that attic space.
So as I'm cutting the drywall square, I finally get a close look at it.
HOLY %*&*% - they had definitely patched it - there were rusted drywall screws next to original drywall nails. And some mudding pro put a solid 1/4 of mudd/plaster on the entire ceiling surface. It's the hardest most consistent looking plaster job I've ever seen.
I didn't even realize I was looking at plaster until i was cutting it and the knife was barely going into it and then I realized I wa sseeing 1/4" of white plaster THEN PAPER then Gypsum.
...
So now I'm about to patch a ceiling that has a 1/4" of perfectly done plaster over it's entire surface. SOB that's gonna be a pain to match
...
That's my venting story. Previous owners knew of a chronic leak and didn't mention it, and they patched the ceiling so well it's going to be a royal PITA to get it right.
I bought my house last May and moved in in late June. About 2.5 weeks after moving in, during a very heavy rain storm, a leak developed in the my foyer ceiling. Pretty good leak, so I tore out the ceiling (which was perfectly flat/had no seams). Well, the water was coming in pretty good past the ceiling 2x8 joists and the subfloor above that that led to an attic space. The joist and subfloor above the ceiling were nicely discolored showing long-term saturation.
But it didn't look to be a patch job from what I could tell. And the buyer's disclosure didn't mention a history of a leak there.
Now, looking back, they knew exactly there was a history of an unfixed leak there. And I'm annoyed. So here's the story:
1. Leak formed as named above.
2. Tried to track it down and couldn't figure it out. Siding LOOKED fine (asbestos shingle). Then finally I realize that someone had put massive beads of caulk in the edge between the roof and a vertical wall of siding coming out of the roof. And the caulk changed colors/look several times - so they had tried to chase the leak down many times with thick beads of caulk.
3. Got the house re-sided and found out that somehow the water was getting behind the siding running right down the edge of the roof and going through a huge hole in the house sheathing. Ugh. Fixed!
4. Finally got up today to square off the ceiling hole (about 3x2') now that it's fully dried out so I can patch it and stop letting a massive air-leak occur up into that attic space.
So as I'm cutting the drywall square, I finally get a close look at it.
HOLY %*&*% - they had definitely patched it - there were rusted drywall screws next to original drywall nails. And some mudding pro put a solid 1/4 of mudd/plaster on the entire ceiling surface. It's the hardest most consistent looking plaster job I've ever seen.
I didn't even realize I was looking at plaster until i was cutting it and the knife was barely going into it and then I realized I wa sseeing 1/4" of white plaster THEN PAPER then Gypsum.
...
So now I'm about to patch a ceiling that has a 1/4" of perfectly done plaster over it's entire surface. SOB that's gonna be a pain to match

...
That's my venting story. Previous owners knew of a chronic leak and didn't mention it, and they patched the ceiling so well it's going to be a royal PITA to get it right.