Home › Forums › Closed Forums › Properties or Areas › An older house
- This topic has 45 replies, 7 voices, and was last updated 14 years, 10 months ago by an.
-
AuthorPosts
-
February 28, 2010 at 9:42 PM #519870March 1, 2010 at 12:32 AM #519890EugeneParticipant
1989 is relatively new. Most serious problems that might require you to tear down walls in order to fix them (asbestos, steel plumbing, no ground wire in electrical outlets) are only present in houses older than 1970 or so. In a 1989 house, major risks include inadequate insulation, 20-year-old appliances, slightly off-vertical walls (not enough to be seen with a naked eye, but enough to make any attempt to install new doors or crown moldings a serious PITA).
March 1, 2010 at 12:32 AM #519798EugeneParticipant1989 is relatively new. Most serious problems that might require you to tear down walls in order to fix them (asbestos, steel plumbing, no ground wire in electrical outlets) are only present in houses older than 1970 or so. In a 1989 house, major risks include inadequate insulation, 20-year-old appliances, slightly off-vertical walls (not enough to be seen with a naked eye, but enough to make any attempt to install new doors or crown moldings a serious PITA).
March 1, 2010 at 12:32 AM #519224EugeneParticipant1989 is relatively new. Most serious problems that might require you to tear down walls in order to fix them (asbestos, steel plumbing, no ground wire in electrical outlets) are only present in houses older than 1970 or so. In a 1989 house, major risks include inadequate insulation, 20-year-old appliances, slightly off-vertical walls (not enough to be seen with a naked eye, but enough to make any attempt to install new doors or crown moldings a serious PITA).
March 1, 2010 at 12:32 AM #520146EugeneParticipant1989 is relatively new. Most serious problems that might require you to tear down walls in order to fix them (asbestos, steel plumbing, no ground wire in electrical outlets) are only present in houses older than 1970 or so. In a 1989 house, major risks include inadequate insulation, 20-year-old appliances, slightly off-vertical walls (not enough to be seen with a naked eye, but enough to make any attempt to install new doors or crown moldings a serious PITA).
March 1, 2010 at 12:32 AM #519365EugeneParticipant1989 is relatively new. Most serious problems that might require you to tear down walls in order to fix them (asbestos, steel plumbing, no ground wire in electrical outlets) are only present in houses older than 1970 or so. In a 1989 house, major risks include inadequate insulation, 20-year-old appliances, slightly off-vertical walls (not enough to be seen with a naked eye, but enough to make any attempt to install new doors or crown moldings a serious PITA).
March 1, 2010 at 9:06 AM #520186anParticipant[quote=Eugene]1989 is relatively new. Most serious problems that might require you to tear down walls in order to fix them (asbestos, steel plumbing, no ground wire in electrical outlets) are only present in houses older than 1970 or so. In a 1989 house, major risks include inadequate insulation, 20-year-old appliances, slightly off-vertical walls (not enough to be seen with a naked eye, but enough to make any attempt to install new doors or crown moldings a serious PITA).[/quote]
I think the house has to be much older than the 80s to make the wall not vertical enough to make it a serious PITA to install new doors and crown moldings. My house was built in 1982 and I installed all new doors & crown molding myself with ease. After the first one, I was averaging 30 min. per door (w/out doing molding on the door.Regarding the OP’s question, depending on if the appliances were replace or not, be prepared to install new water heater and furnace and/or AC. If they haven’t been replaced yet, 21 years is pretty much near their end of life. Regular water heater (~$1k), furnace (~$2500), AC (~$3500).
March 1, 2010 at 9:06 AM #519929anParticipant[quote=Eugene]1989 is relatively new. Most serious problems that might require you to tear down walls in order to fix them (asbestos, steel plumbing, no ground wire in electrical outlets) are only present in houses older than 1970 or so. In a 1989 house, major risks include inadequate insulation, 20-year-old appliances, slightly off-vertical walls (not enough to be seen with a naked eye, but enough to make any attempt to install new doors or crown moldings a serious PITA).[/quote]
I think the house has to be much older than the 80s to make the wall not vertical enough to make it a serious PITA to install new doors and crown moldings. My house was built in 1982 and I installed all new doors & crown molding myself with ease. After the first one, I was averaging 30 min. per door (w/out doing molding on the door.Regarding the OP’s question, depending on if the appliances were replace or not, be prepared to install new water heater and furnace and/or AC. If they haven’t been replaced yet, 21 years is pretty much near their end of life. Regular water heater (~$1k), furnace (~$2500), AC (~$3500).
March 1, 2010 at 9:06 AM #519838anParticipant[quote=Eugene]1989 is relatively new. Most serious problems that might require you to tear down walls in order to fix them (asbestos, steel plumbing, no ground wire in electrical outlets) are only present in houses older than 1970 or so. In a 1989 house, major risks include inadequate insulation, 20-year-old appliances, slightly off-vertical walls (not enough to be seen with a naked eye, but enough to make any attempt to install new doors or crown moldings a serious PITA).[/quote]
I think the house has to be much older than the 80s to make the wall not vertical enough to make it a serious PITA to install new doors and crown moldings. My house was built in 1982 and I installed all new doors & crown molding myself with ease. After the first one, I was averaging 30 min. per door (w/out doing molding on the door.Regarding the OP’s question, depending on if the appliances were replace or not, be prepared to install new water heater and furnace and/or AC. If they haven’t been replaced yet, 21 years is pretty much near their end of life. Regular water heater (~$1k), furnace (~$2500), AC (~$3500).
March 1, 2010 at 9:06 AM #519264anParticipant[quote=Eugene]1989 is relatively new. Most serious problems that might require you to tear down walls in order to fix them (asbestos, steel plumbing, no ground wire in electrical outlets) are only present in houses older than 1970 or so. In a 1989 house, major risks include inadequate insulation, 20-year-old appliances, slightly off-vertical walls (not enough to be seen with a naked eye, but enough to make any attempt to install new doors or crown moldings a serious PITA).[/quote]
I think the house has to be much older than the 80s to make the wall not vertical enough to make it a serious PITA to install new doors and crown moldings. My house was built in 1982 and I installed all new doors & crown molding myself with ease. After the first one, I was averaging 30 min. per door (w/out doing molding on the door.Regarding the OP’s question, depending on if the appliances were replace or not, be prepared to install new water heater and furnace and/or AC. If they haven’t been replaced yet, 21 years is pretty much near their end of life. Regular water heater (~$1k), furnace (~$2500), AC (~$3500).
March 1, 2010 at 9:06 AM #519405anParticipant[quote=Eugene]1989 is relatively new. Most serious problems that might require you to tear down walls in order to fix them (asbestos, steel plumbing, no ground wire in electrical outlets) are only present in houses older than 1970 or so. In a 1989 house, major risks include inadequate insulation, 20-year-old appliances, slightly off-vertical walls (not enough to be seen with a naked eye, but enough to make any attempt to install new doors or crown moldings a serious PITA).[/quote]
I think the house has to be much older than the 80s to make the wall not vertical enough to make it a serious PITA to install new doors and crown moldings. My house was built in 1982 and I installed all new doors & crown molding myself with ease. After the first one, I was averaging 30 min. per door (w/out doing molding on the door.Regarding the OP’s question, depending on if the appliances were replace or not, be prepared to install new water heater and furnace and/or AC. If they haven’t been replaced yet, 21 years is pretty much near their end of life. Regular water heater (~$1k), furnace (~$2500), AC (~$3500).
March 1, 2010 at 12:35 PM #519545briansd1Guest[quote=Eugene] crown moldings [/quote]
What’s up with the crown molding craze?
Southern California houses are supposed to be modernist type suburban houses, especially the older houses of the 1970s.
Remember the ranch style houses?
March 1, 2010 at 12:35 PM #519978briansd1Guest[quote=Eugene] crown moldings [/quote]
What’s up with the crown molding craze?
Southern California houses are supposed to be modernist type suburban houses, especially the older houses of the 1970s.
Remember the ranch style houses?
March 1, 2010 at 12:35 PM #520326briansd1Guest[quote=Eugene] crown moldings [/quote]
What’s up with the crown molding craze?
Southern California houses are supposed to be modernist type suburban houses, especially the older houses of the 1970s.
Remember the ranch style houses?
March 1, 2010 at 12:35 PM #520069briansd1Guest[quote=Eugene] crown moldings [/quote]
What’s up with the crown molding craze?
Southern California houses are supposed to be modernist type suburban houses, especially the older houses of the 1970s.
Remember the ranch style houses?
-
AuthorPosts
- The forum ‘Properties or Areas’ is closed to new topics and replies.