Foreign.
Speaker BThe House with Eric G.
Speaker BYour go to source for everything home improvement.
Speaker BWhether you're a DIY enthusiast or just looking to make your space shine, Eric G.
Speaker BIs here to guide you through the latest tips, tricks and trends coming up in this week's first hour of the show.
Speaker BEric G.
Speaker BIs a bit under the weather this week, so he is resting up for next week's show.
Speaker BNow let's revisit an older episode with RK Bob Brown, the Dirt Whisperer.
Speaker BNow let's talk about foundations.
Speaker CReally, the reason why you're calling somebody for analysis is you want, you have questions.
Speaker CYou want to know how bad is it going to get worse?
Speaker CWhat happens if I do nothing?
Speaker CYou have all these questions.
Speaker CWell, you're going to get those answers to questions from a foundation salesperson one way.
Speaker CYou're going to get them another way from a licensed professional engineer who has no axe to grind, who has nothing to sell you more.
Speaker BSo grab your toolbox, put on your thinking cap and let's get to work right here on around the House with.
Speaker AEric G.
Speaker AWelcome to the Round the House show, the next generation of home improvement.
Speaker AI'm Eric G.
Speaker AThis hour is brought to you by our friends at Monument Grills.
Speaker AIf you're looking for that brand new barbecue, check them out@monumentgrills.com well, this is going to be an episode that if you're a homeowner, and most of you are, this is one you don't want to miss because we are going to dive deep into foundation repair, pull the curtains back and talk about it today.
Speaker AAnd I have the ultimate guest here today, RK Bob Brown, the Dirt Whisperer.
Speaker AHe's read a book that you gotta check out, foundation repair secrets.
Speaker ABob welcome back to around the House Brother.
Speaker CHey, thanks for having me.
Speaker CI'm glad to be here, man.
Speaker AYou are singing my song.
Speaker AI love what you're doing out there because there is this dark underworld of foundation repair and I don't want to go out and hammer on an industry out there.
Speaker AThere's a lot of great people out there, but there's also a lot of one, a lot of people out there that are making millions of dollars a year with fear and lack of knowledge of homeowners and they're getting rich off an unfortunate situation.
Speaker CThat's exactly right.
Speaker AIt's just shocking how much it is.
Speaker AWe see people out there with the duct cleaning and that kind of stuff.
Speaker ABut I think our number one thing that's fleecing homeowners these days is broken foundations, cracks in the foundation or even water in the basement.
Speaker AAnd I love what you've been doing, and it seemed like you've been doing this for a long time.
Speaker CYeah, 35 years.
Speaker CAnd there's.
Speaker CThere is a tremendous.
Speaker CAs you pointed out, there's a tremendous amount of myths in this business, and we can talk about some of those.
Speaker CWe won't get through them all because it'd be like trying to drink through a fire hose.
Speaker CBut if anybody wants to sign up for my newsletter, foundationrepairsecrets.com you can get a copy of the 15 Myths of Foundation repair and real estate, and also the 10 most common mistakes that people make with foundation repair.
Speaker CAnd that'll help you out here, because I know a lot of your head's gonna be swimming by the time we get through here.
Speaker AYeah, guys.
Speaker AAnd this is an amazing resource.
Speaker ACheck it out, because there is so much information over there, as we've talked about on the show before.
Speaker AI used to work for a foundation repair company for a while, and this is an amazing resource.
Speaker ABefore you have anybody come out and talk to you at your house, check into this stuff, because this is gonna save you a ton of money.
Speaker AWe've seen in my area here.
Speaker AGreat example, Bob.
Speaker AWe have a bunch of homes here in my Portland, Oregon, metro area that the city of Portland did a disservice to.
Speaker AWe have a bunch of homes between 19 to 1930 where they weren't washing the sand and just horrible concrete.
Speaker AAnd then about 30 or 40 years ago, they realized that all the storm drains coming off of people's gutters that they put into the sewer system, it was overwhelming the sewer system when you get our rains.
Speaker ASo they paid people with tax rebates to disconnect those downspouts and drop those.
Speaker ADidn't tell them they had to do it.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThey just capped off the.
Speaker APut a lead seal and capped off the sewer drain there and dropped them right next to the foundation.
Speaker ANow we got 100,000 plus homes out there with foundation issues.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CWater is a catalyst for sure.
Speaker AIt is shocking.
Speaker AI have been down in these homes before, and I could get down there with a ballpoint pen, and if I took 15 minutes, I could dig through to the exterior of the house.
Speaker AIt's shocking.
Speaker AWith what One of the biggest myths out there that I think we see is people go, oh, dirt's dirt.
Speaker ADoesn't matter.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker ALet's talk about it.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker AIt's a huge issue.
Speaker CIt's a lot more complicated than people realize because dirt gets deposited in layers and These layers, there could be 10, 20, 30 layers within a 30 foot depth.
Speaker CAnd each of them is a different mineral content, different affinities for water, different densities, different reactions to water.
Speaker CAnd they're not even layers.
Speaker CSome are fat, some are skinny, they move, they die out.
Speaker CThere's rocks, it's very complicated.
Speaker CAnd there's a lot of things going on in each of these layers all at the same time.
Speaker CSo that's why you really need geotechnical engineers.
Speaker CThey understand this better than anybody else.
Speaker AWell, I think one of the worst things is if you have a fat layer of clay on one side of the house and not on the other side.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker AYou've got that ground expanding and contracting, but at way too different rates, which leads to foundation issues.
Speaker CYep, that's right.
Speaker CClays can be a very problematic source of problems.
Speaker CAnd as you mentioned, they, they can contract and expand.
Speaker CIf you have wet and dry seasons, the key is changes in moisture.
Speaker CIf you see a change in moisture, you're going to have problems.
Speaker CIf you have clays, it's one of.
Speaker AThe things that happens around my area.
Speaker AIn the summertime here we have, we are very much a wet and dry season.
Speaker ASummertime, it's totally dry.
Speaker AWe don't get rain and people's yards.
Speaker AYou'll see the cracks in the clay.
Speaker AIt looks like a dry lake bed.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker ASo I've been out with engineers and said, hey, can you make sure and water your flower beds around the outside of your lawn?
Speaker AIt's probably going to save your foundation or at least help it.
Speaker CYou know, that's interesting because that's what they do in Houston now in Phoenix, where it's a desert, you would never do that.
Speaker CSo you have to talk to the engineers and see what their recommendations are for that.
Speaker CBecause regionally they're going to change depending on annual rainfall, depending on soil conditions, depending on a lot of things.
Speaker CAnd you can save yourself a lot of trouble just with a smart conversation with a good geotechnical engineer and listen to their recommendations.
Speaker AThat has always been my first thing.
Speaker AIf you notice cracks in your foundation, cracks in the drywall, doors and stuff not opening, I've always said before, you call that foundation company, call the engineer first and get their recommendations.
Speaker CWhat do you think about that?
Speaker CThat is my number one recommendation and I'll tell you why.
Speaker CThere's a bunch of reasons.
Speaker CBut let's just take Susie's Q homeowner.
Speaker CShe calls out three contractors.
Speaker COne contractor says, oh, you need 15 peers on this side of the house.
Speaker CThe other one Says, you need.
Speaker COh, no, you need 12 on this side of the house.
Speaker CAnd the other one says, no, you need 25 all the way around.
Speaker CNow, as a homeowner, how would you know?
Speaker CYou don't.
Speaker CYou're not a professional.
Speaker CYou have no idea.
Speaker CAnd that's what these companies bank on.
Speaker CThey're banking on the fact that their proposal is different so they don't have to compare apples to apples.
Speaker CAnd so then in the end, you just end up going with the guy you're most comfortable with, which is the best salesman, which probably is the least qualified to act as an engineer, because that's what these sales consultants are doing.
Speaker CThey're doing geotechnical and structural engineering without a license.
Speaker CBasically, yeah.
Speaker AAnd if you've got a clay soil issue, maybe those piles are not the answer.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CIt could be a heat problem and it may not need underpinning at all.
Speaker CYou may just need to fix the drainage.
Speaker CThere's lots of things.
Speaker CI need to monitor it.
Speaker COne of the, one of the myths is, ah, we got cracks, we gotta underpin it right away.
Speaker CNo, that's not true.
Speaker CYou can monitor it.
Speaker CGet a good geotechnical engineer, a forensic engineer out there.
Speaker CHe may say, hey, yeah, you've got some problems, but it's not the end of the world.
Speaker COr, hey, let's monitor it for six months to a year and see how much it's still moving.
Speaker CIt may be all done moving.
Speaker CThose are the kinds of things that you're going to get from engineers.
Speaker CNow, engineer is not going to be free.
Speaker CFoundation repair companies, they're going to send out their analysis, which is basically a sales pitch disguised as analysis for free.
Speaker CBut look at it this way.
Speaker CWould you go to a doctor and pay good money if you had a serious problem, or would you go for free to a pharmaceutical rep?
Speaker CThat's about what it turns into.
Speaker AYou're right.
Speaker CAnd you know what?
Speaker CIf you get a good geotechnical engineer and he says, okay, yeah, it's still moving, yeah, we need to fix it, we need to underpin it.
Speaker CNow he'll say, he'll give you a plan that says, put in 13 peers right here.
Speaker CNo more, no less.
Speaker CWell, now, that's right.
Speaker CAnd you can go get that three bids, and guess what?
Speaker CAll those guys are going to sharpen their pencil because they know they're bidding apples to apples.
Speaker CYou're probably going to save the money that you spent and more with the engineer.
Speaker AAnd the beautiful thing is, if you go to sell that house one day, you go, here's the engineer's report stamped, and here's the fix that I had done.
Speaker AIt is good to gold versus the foundation salesperson talked me into doing.
Speaker CWell.
Speaker CAnd let me tell you, all these foundation repair companies, they give a lifetime warranty, right?
Speaker CThat's not worth the paper it's written on.
Speaker CThere are so many get out of jail free cards in that thing.
Speaker CI'll give you an example.
Speaker CSo five years later, the homeowner calls the contractor and says, hello, yeah, my house is cracking all up again.
Speaker CYour foundation fix isn't working.
Speaker CCome out here and honor your lifetime warranty.
Speaker CSo then the foundation repair salesman or contractor sends out a really experienced guy, and he says, oh, well, this problem is from heave.
Speaker CAnd it says right here in our contract that our peers can't fix Heave.
Speaker CSo, hey, have a nice life.
Speaker CAnd the whole one is, oh, now what?
Speaker CAnd if they're really smart, they might go, hey, wait, wait.
Speaker CIf it's heave, didn't you diagnose it wrong in the first place?
Speaker ACorrect.
Speaker CAnd the contractor says, hey, what do we know?
Speaker CWe're not engineers.
Speaker CWe're just stupid contractors.
Speaker CSee ya.
Speaker AIt's like house inspections.
Speaker AWhen you're going through buying a house and the realtor or wherever you're located has the house inspector go through their liability is the price generally of the price that you paid for the house inspection, they'll give you the 500 bucks back.
Speaker ADoesn't do any good for the issue.
Speaker CYeah, it doesn't cover the problem.
Speaker ADoesn't cover the problem.
Speaker AMy favorite one here is all the foundation companies in my area because we do have earthquakes from time to time.
Speaker AAnytime there's a 1.0 and higher, those guys are out buying everybody drinks because it just reset all their warranties out there.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker ASeismic activity.
Speaker CYep, that's right.
Speaker CEven though there's a lot more than that, too.
Speaker CThere's a ton of get out of jail free cards.
Speaker CThey only warranty the areas they peer.
Speaker CAs you pointed out, the best thing is to have an engineer seal.
Speaker AYep.
Speaker AIt's crazy.
Speaker AIt's crazy.
Speaker AAnd let's talk about what cracks are here.
Speaker AAnd let's start over at the beginning here, because so many people go walking around the house, maybe they're doing some landscaping the spring, and they're like, oh, wow, I got a crawl space or a foundation vent or a window.
Speaker AOn Arizona, you don't have too many of those.
Speaker ABut there are some other parts of the country, like here, where we have lots of crawl spaces and basements.
Speaker AAnd you see Those cracks reading out of the corners, and people go into panic mode and they don't know what to deal with.
Speaker CYeah, yeah.
Speaker CAnd it's absolutely true.
Speaker CAnd the last thing you want is somebody saying to you, oh, yeah, on a scale of 1 to 10, this is an 8.5.
Speaker CAnd you're thinking, because really, the reason why you're calling somebody for analysis is you want.
Speaker CYou have questions.
Speaker CYou want to know, how bad is it going to get worse?
Speaker CWhat happens if I do nothing?
Speaker CYou have all these questions.
Speaker CWell, you're going to get those answers to questions from a foundation salesperson one way.
Speaker CYou're going to get him another way from a licensed professional engineer who has no ax to grind, who has nothing to sell you more other than just trying to make sure he does the right thing for you.
Speaker CAfter all, he's governed by the board of technical registration.
Speaker CSo if he does something wrong, people can haul his buns up there to the registrar and say, hey, this guy's acting unethically, or he.
Speaker CHe's acting outside of his area of experience.
Speaker CWhat do you.
Speaker CWhat kind of oversight do you have for foundation repair salespeople?
Speaker ANothing.
Speaker AAnd what I don't like, and this is where I think homeowners become the victim here, is I see a lot of great people out there that are going in and doing it honestly.
Speaker ABut in my area, there's a couple companies here that are the ultimate of arm twisting.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker AGo around, do the report.
Speaker AThey print it out in the car, come in, and you're there for 90 minutes.
Speaker AHere in the pitch, 35% off if you sign today.
Speaker COh, more than 90 minutes.
Speaker CSometimes there for three hours.
Speaker AIt gets crazy, and the homeowner is totally scared, and they got to think about.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AWhat to do and.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIt's absolutely insane.
Speaker CAs long as we're talking about engineers, let me and.
Speaker CAnd warranties, let me bring.
Speaker CLet me bring up one more important point.
Speaker COne of the.
Speaker COne of the pernicious mistruths that is told out there is that, hey, don't worry, when we pull permits, we're going to have the engineer look this over and make sure everything's good.
Speaker CThat is absolutely not true.
Speaker CAnd I'll tell you why.
Speaker CBecause an engineer cannot put his seal to anything that he did not gather the data for, or somebody under his direct employee gathered the data for, which means if somebody from another company gathered the data, the engineer cannot put his seal to it.
Speaker CSo, in fact, when you go to pull permits, the only requirement that the city has for the engineer to put his seal to is a spacing calculation for piers.
Speaker CAll they want to do is make sure you're not putting them too far apart so that the house droops between the piers.
Speaker CIt's not that hard to do.
Speaker CA monkey could do that calculation.
Speaker CIt's super easy.
Speaker CMost of the time it's either 6ft or 8ft, unless it's a really old house without rebar in the footings or something.
Speaker CBut the fact of the matter is, you could have piers on the wrong side of the house.
Speaker CYou could have too many piers.
Speaker CYou could have piers that aren't needed at all.
Speaker CThere's nothing in the Permian process that corrects for any of those errors at all.
Speaker CAnd the engineer will not be able to fix any of those because he did not gather the data, he didn't understand the problem, and he didn't design the fix to the problem.
Speaker CLet me give you an example.
Speaker CI had a homeowner up here in Show Low who they had a block stem wall that never got grouted, and it had moved out from the house, and the house was sitting on like, the.
Speaker CThe last inch and a half of block.
Speaker CAnd so the foundation company told her, oh, yeah, when we underpinned this, we're going to rotate that right back into place.
Speaker CWell, they underpinned it and it didn't rotate back into place.
Speaker CAnd so then they.
Speaker CAnd they pulled a permit.
Speaker CThey had an engineer put a seal on the drawings, the whole ball of wax.
Speaker CBut when she said, hey, the reason I called you is for this.
Speaker CCan you.
Speaker CWhat happened?
Speaker CAnd they're like, well, if you really want that fixed, we're going to have to hire a mason contractor.
Speaker CIt's going to cost you another $27,000.
Speaker CAnd she's.
Speaker CSo I called the engineer, I said, hey, so what's the deal?
Speaker CHow come you didn't address this problem?
Speaker CAnd he's.
Speaker CI didn't even know about that problem.
Speaker CThey just told me they wanted peers at a certain spot, and I did the spacing calc.
Speaker CAnd that's exactly what happens.
Speaker AAh, that's brutal.
Speaker AAnd I tell you what, I have had more issues, especially in my area where it's wet with CMU block foundations like that, concrete block foundations.
Speaker ABecause many times here in our area, when they built these homes, especially 20, 30, 40, 50 years ago, whatever they were, the inside of those hollow blocks didn't get filled up.
Speaker AAnd so you can have a leak someplace on the other side of the house.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker AAnd it just leaks through and comes out on the other side of the house over there.
Speaker AThe only way you can waterproof that foundation is from the outside, because otherwise you're chasing it forever.
Speaker AIt's impossible.
Speaker CRight, I agree.
Speaker AIt's just every time I see those, I go, oh, man, if that thing starts leaking, it's an excavation project.
Speaker AIt is a problem.
Speaker ASo what do you see out there when.
Speaker AWhat.
Speaker AWhat's the best mode for people to go down when they go, okay, I think I have a problem.
Speaker AWhether it's a house sinking or appears to be sinking or any of these kind of problems with foundation issues.
Speaker AOf course, we start out with the engineer, but is there anything people should be looking for when they're out finding, looking for that contractor out there that you recommend?
Speaker CWell, let me just say this because I like to beat on the industry a lot, but the fact of the matter is that most of the time when somebody's putting in peers, they're doing a pretty good job.
Speaker CThe peers are good products for the most part, and the contractors putting them in do a pretty good job.
Speaker CI'm not saying they're perfect, but they do a pretty good job.
Speaker CAnd honestly, the thing that you need to be careful of is the diagnosis once you get a plan.
Speaker COne of the things that I would do, because most of the time, city inspectors don't really understand what's going on with this kind of stuff.
Speaker CAnd so then they hire.
Speaker CThey want you to hire a special inspector.
Speaker CWell, a lot of times the city leaves it up the contractor to hire their own special inspector.
Speaker CWell, that's like the fox guarding the henhouse.
Speaker CThat's dumb.
Speaker CWhy would you do that?
Speaker CThe better way is to have the engineer that designs the plan be the special inspector.
Speaker CHe's the one that holds the contractor accountable.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CAnd if the contractor doesn't get something right, he's going to insist because he's going to put his seal on it.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAnd guess what?
Speaker CHere's what happens.
Speaker CA lot of times you get halfway through the project, and what happens, oh, Mr.
Speaker CJones.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CWe're going to need to add five more peers to your project.
Speaker AHow's the homeowner know that?
Speaker AThey're like, you have no idea.
Speaker CIf they push back and go, well, no, I don't want to add five peers.
Speaker CThen the contractor says, well, okay, then we can't warranty your project.
Speaker COh, no, okay, well, I'll spend the extra $25,000.
Speaker CAnd the fact of the matter is, if you have an engineer who designed the plan, and now the contractor comes and says, hey, we need to add five Peers.
Speaker CAnd the engineer is going to say, all right, hog breath, explain this to me.
Speaker CJustify it to me.
Speaker CThey're going to be a lot more careful.
Speaker CAnd you got somebody that knows what they're doing, watching out for change orders that are not authorized.
Speaker CI'd say, at least in my area of experience, half the projects that get installed have change orders.
Speaker AThat's incredible.
Speaker AYou think about how many change orders that is because they dive into it, and all of a sudden it's way worse.
Speaker CYeah, well, you know, the sales guy missed something.
Speaker CWhatever.
Speaker CI mean, it happens all the time.
Speaker CI can tell you from the inside, after owning a foundation repair business and a forensic engineering business, that I hear stories.
Speaker CI still hear stories.
Speaker CI still have friends that I know that own foundation repair companies in the business.
Speaker CAnd they.
Speaker CThe stories just go on and on about they get out to the job, and it's, what the hell?
Speaker CSo the sales guy, he totally missed it.
Speaker CNow we got to come up with a totally different plan.
Speaker CIt happens a lot.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, absolutely.
Speaker AI was going to ask you, what do you see out there with technology and stuff?
Speaker AThere's lots of different ways to fix concrete now, and we're seeing more and more from trees getting bigger and other environmental things outside of the house.
Speaker AWe're seeing those Boeing foundations where you got horizontal cracks, things like that.
Speaker AWhat is your favorite way to deal with that?
Speaker AAnd of course, that's not.
Speaker AThere's not a one fix all.
Speaker ABut what's your favorite way?
Speaker CHonestly, if you're going to put a pier in the ground to fix a foundation, a helical pier or a push pier, you could do a micropile, but nobody's going to do that.
Speaker CNobody's going to spend that kind of money unless you're in a really rocky situation.
Speaker CI have a friend who owns a business up there in Reno, and it's all rock, so that's mostly what they do.
Speaker CBut other than that, push piers, helical piers are going to work great.
Speaker CThe question is, is that fix the problem if you've got a heat problem?
Speaker CWell, now what?
Speaker CWell, I developed a patented system that dries out the clays underneath the foundation called the moisture level system, and it runs air through the gravel layer that's right under the concrete, and then it dries out those clays over time.
Speaker CAnd the idea is to keep them from.
Speaker CTo stop them from swelling.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAnd it does work.
Speaker CIt removed about 26 gallons of water every day on the average.
Speaker CPretty good little system.
Speaker CAnother innovation that I'm working on is interior floor Slab.
Speaker CIf you want to raise up an interior floor slab, let's say it's on clays and you don't want to put a foam underneath there.
Speaker CWell, you raise it up with foam and now those clays get wet.
Speaker COh, man.
Speaker CNow you're going to really heave like crazy.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CSo that's a scary situation.
Speaker CYou don't want to do that.
Speaker CBut if you have to put in piers, you have to core in 8 inch holes in the slab every 4ft on center.
Speaker CYou just destroyed the integrity of the slab.
Speaker CAnd you spent about $300,000 just to raise up a floor slab.
Speaker CNobody's going to do that.
Speaker CWell, I've developed a system where you can core an inch and a half hole and use that to raise up a slab.
Speaker CSuper cheap battery driven equipment, no hydraulics needed and super cheap, super fast.
Speaker CAnd stay tuned, we're doing the testing on this system right now.
Speaker AThat is awesome.
Speaker AThat is awesome.
Speaker AYou just reminded me of the worst foundation nightmare I had walked into.
Speaker AAnd you've probably seen this before, but for me is only a couple of years in the industry.
Speaker ASomebody had put in a trough drain system around the house, one of those systems around the basement.
Speaker AAnd they kept going through sump pumps, but they were going through good sump pumps like zoellers every couple of years.
Speaker AAnd I'm like, oh, something's up.
Speaker ASo go in there and I look it up and I'm like, well, you got a lot of dirt in the bottom of this.
Speaker ASo I went around and peeled stuff back, put my inspection cam under the foundation wall and they had a 12 by 24 inch void under the entire foundation wall.
Speaker AThis 1920s home.
Speaker AWow.
Speaker AWater had been coming in underneath that and just washing it out.
Speaker AYeah, washing it out.
Speaker ASo the only thing holding up this was the tension from the dirt outside and the slab that was holding things, were they there?
Speaker AAnd I just went, man, you got a huge problem here and you need to go talk to an engineer and an attorney at the same time.
Speaker CYep, exactly right.
Speaker ABecause you got a big problem.
Speaker ABecause.
Speaker AWhat do you mean?
Speaker AI go look at my camera right here and that inspection camera told so many things.
Speaker AI'm like, there is.
Speaker AYour house is floating on air right now and if we have a small earthquake, those posts are on the slab.
Speaker ASo it's going to push up that foot.
Speaker ASo you're going to have a serious problem.
Speaker AAnd I didn't, don't know what happened after that, but I felt bad because that was probably house that needed a new foundation.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAnd That's a total rebuild.
Speaker CYou know, that's not a cheap fix.
Speaker AYou know, I've done in the past on those situations.
Speaker AI don't know if you've ever done this before.
Speaker AWe did new interior foundations.
Speaker AHave you ever seen that done?
Speaker CYeah, I haven't done too much of that.
Speaker COne of the things that we did is we used a modified push pier and drove it down on the interior in the crawl space.
Speaker CAnd that worked pretty dang good.
Speaker CYeah, nice.
Speaker AWe've done those in the past where it's a.
Speaker AMaybe a historical building and it's brick on the outside and it's all coming apart.
Speaker AAnd you still try to head instead of them coming in and lifting the house up and doing the brick, because it was historical, doing it on the inside to do it.
Speaker ABut the problem is one, you got to gut the house down there, take all the H vac or whatever's in the basement, and it's a quite the big project.
Speaker ABut better than jacking the house up and moving everybody out of the house, right?
Speaker CYeah, that's right.
Speaker AWhat do you think of carbon fiber as a repair tool out there for cracks?
Speaker AHave you used that a lot?
Speaker CSure, yeah.
Speaker CCarbon fiber is a great tool.
Speaker CYou just got to know when to use it.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CSometimes people think it's great for everything, and it's not.
Speaker CIt's a very Strong product.
Speaker CIt's 10 times stronger than steel for the weight, and it works great.
Speaker CI have a 3D printer that prints 3D carbon fiber pieces, and that's for another system that I'm working on.
Speaker CBut yeah, it's great.
Speaker CI used it in slabs a lot.
Speaker CSo I would use a laminate, which is like a 16th of an inch by 18 inches long by 2 inches tall.
Speaker CAnd it's extruded, so it's more carbon fiber than epoxy, which, strangely enough, makes it stronger.
Speaker CBecause the carbon fiber is stronger than the epoxy.
Speaker AExactly.
Speaker CSo when you extrude it, you get about seven times the strength of regular carbon fiber.
Speaker CAnd what you do is if you have a crack that snakes across the floor, you saw cut these channels in and you just slip them in.
Speaker CThe old way is to cut it a 1 inch, chisel it out, throw a rebar in there, and epoxy it in.
Speaker CYeah, that's really a really difficult and odd.
Speaker CWe would just saw, cut it, slide these in, and we would use a polyurea instead of an epoxy.
Speaker CAnd a polyurea sets up very quickly.
Speaker CAnd it's so thin, it's like thinner than water almost.
Speaker CIt's about the same, I think, 20 center poise.
Speaker CAnd it soaks into the concrete around it when it goes into to the channels and creates a bond that is super, super strong.
Speaker CAnd epoxy is stronger than polyureas, but it doesn't go into the pores.
Speaker CAnd so you have a failure of adhesion.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AYou can grab 10 times the concrete.
Speaker CRight, right.
Speaker CAnd the key is to put these in, not parallel, but skew them, and that way they can't slide.
Speaker CAnd I'm gonna tell you, that's a great system.
Speaker CIt's worked great.
Speaker CI had very few problems with those over 35 years.
Speaker AAll you're doing is basically stitching it back together.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker AThat is brilliant.
Speaker AThat is brilliant.
Speaker AI've used a couple times, I've used the little barbell, you know, the staples, that stuff before.
Speaker AAnd those worked.
Speaker AOkay, but your system is way better than that.
Speaker CYeah, I know what your system you're referring to.
Speaker CThey copied my system.
Speaker ADid they?
Speaker AOkay, that's probably where they got it.
Speaker AI get it.
Speaker AYeah, those crazy Canadians.
Speaker ABut I've used it a few times, and there's a product that I've been using.
Speaker AI did it on one project.
Speaker AIt was probably the hardest material I've ever worked with.
Speaker AAnd Simpson strong tie had came out with it.
Speaker AAnd I don't know if you've seen this before out there.
Speaker AIt is a.
Speaker AIf you've got a.
Speaker ALike a brick building and you want to make it where.
Speaker AOr a brick foundation.
Speaker AYou want to make it so it's going to hold up to an earthquake.
Speaker AThere's that carbon fiber spray that they spray on with.
Speaker AIt's got carbon fiber concrete.
Speaker AAnd then they put a carbon fiber mesh on it.
Speaker COh, yeah.
Speaker CAnd so then they plaster it to the wall.
Speaker CThere's a good case for that because what it does is it puts everything in confinement and hold and keeps it all together.
Speaker CSo I would say that if it's done right, that's probably a good system.
Speaker CBut really, to be done right, you need to do it on both sides, which is probably hard to do.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I tell you what, there is not a harder material I've ever worked with than that.
Speaker CYeah, I can believe that.
Speaker AGet the mix incorrectly.
Speaker AAnd that carbon fiber being so fibrous, it loves to plug everything up.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker AWe sat outside for about eight hours one day with the right sprayer and everything else, and I'm like, this is the most frustrating product I've ever worked with.
Speaker AAnd I'm sure they've got it better now as when it was first coming on the market.
Speaker ASo this was a number of years ago, but anytime that we can come up with a product that's going to help people in earthquake or hurricane areas like that to be able to hold up to older brick buildings, I think it's great.
Speaker CI think, speaking of that, quite often have you been to a.
Speaker CLike a stem wall, you see a horizontal crack right above the dirt.
Speaker COkay.
Speaker CAnd that is the rebar rusting.
Speaker CIt's called rust jacking.
Speaker CAnd so what you really need to do is take that rebar out and put a composite rebar in its place, which is easy to do.
Speaker CAnybody can do it, Right?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CBut now what do you do when you get to the hold down straps?
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CBecause those are made of galvanized.
Speaker CThey're steel with a little galvanized coating on them.
Speaker CAnd that galvanized coating is gone after two years.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CAnd now those straps are super thin.
Speaker CI've never seen any of them last more than a couple of years.
Speaker CAnd how do you replace them?
Speaker CWell, that means if it's a frame stucco house, you got to go up the stucco, peel back the lath and the wire, remove the old strap, put a new strap in, put the wire and paper back, stucco it to match.
Speaker CHard to do.
Speaker CPaint it to match.
Speaker CHard to do.
Speaker CAnd then put all that back in and hope that it lasts another three years, which is crazy.
Speaker CWhat I did is I developed the carbon fiber product called the Never Rust that goes from the underside.
Speaker CIt has screws that go up through the base plate and into the studs on an angle.
Speaker CThey cross each other and then it hangs down inside the concrete.
Speaker CAnd the fiberglass rebar that runs through it has holes that runs through it.
Speaker CSo now the rebar, the fiberglass rebar is part of the hold down system.
Speaker CAnd really slick, really sharp.
Speaker CAnd I'm hoping that as people start to realize that this is a problem that they'll figure out this is a.
Speaker AGood solution for it, especially in coastal areas where it's not even going to last that long.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AGet that salt water out there.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker AThat galvanized doesn't have.
Speaker AThere's a reason why roofing companies say in coastal areas to use stainless steel nails because of one.
Speaker AAnd then you want to use something structural that is brilliant and it doesn't care if it's salt water or not.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CThat makes no difference, right, Bob, you've.
Speaker AGot your hands in about everything with foundations.
Speaker AI love it, man.
Speaker AI love it.
Speaker AOne of the things That I think is problematic.
Speaker AAnd I'm going to set this up with real estate professionals, our real estate professionals out there.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker AI have a picture that I wiped the real estate agent's name off.
Speaker AThere was a crack in this old house foundation that someone had nicely painted up to look really pretty, that I could put my fingers in the hole all the way down.
Speaker AAnd they had printed up a nice little sign that says, this crack has been here for the entire lifetime of the house, has caused no problems.
Speaker AAnd I'm like, yeah, really?
Speaker CI, you know, I do the training for home inspectors, for realtors, for their license renewals.
Speaker CAnd the first thing I tell realtors is, never opine about any crack.
Speaker CNever try to characterize it.
Speaker CNever try to say it's normal.
Speaker CNever.
Speaker CDon't talk about that.
Speaker CI had one realtor say, well, if a crack is horizontal, it's bad.
Speaker CIf it's stairstep, it's normal.
Speaker CI'm like, don't be doing that.
Speaker CThat's putting your livelihood at risk.
Speaker CDon't opine about that.
Speaker CThe best thing, the best advice I give to realtors is, hey, look, if you're starting to list a house and you walk around in cracks, doors that are pinched, fat on one side, pinched on the other, sloping floors, windows that maybe might be pinched.
Speaker CIf you see this in a pattern, in a grouping, don't try to sneak through the escrow, because what's going to happen is you're going to get an inspector that calls it out, and guess what?
Speaker CThen they're going to call a foundation repair company.
Speaker CBecause that's when you Google it, that's who comes up.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CIn a hurry, 60 come out, and they're going to say, yeah, you need $60,000 in peers.
Speaker CAnd then the whole escrow blows apart.
Speaker CEverybody goes their separate ways.
Speaker CAnd guess what?
Speaker CThe listing agent gets fired.
Speaker CAnd I'll tell you why they get fired.
Speaker CBecause the homeowner cannot ask the listing agent to lie about it.
Speaker CSo they fire the listing agent.
Speaker CThey go in and patch everything up the best they can.
Speaker CThey hire a new listing agent.
Speaker CThat's not the right way to do it.
Speaker CThe best way is for the listing agent.
Speaker CYou see these problems.
Speaker CGet to know some good forensic engineers in your area.
Speaker CAnd if you go to my website, Foundation Repair Secrets, there's a directory of engineers for every state.
Speaker CGo into that directory and find some good engineers.
Speaker CGet to know them, take them to lunch, get their opinion.
Speaker CAnd then when the time is right, you can call on them to come out and take a look.
Speaker CAt this.
Speaker CAnd they'll do one of two things.
Speaker CThey'll say, it's probably fine, and here's a seal.
Speaker COr they may say, oh, yeah, we might need to fix it.
Speaker COh, and here's a plan.
Speaker CNow you can get it fixed, and he'll supervise it, make sure it's done, put a seal on the end.
Speaker CAnd now when the inspector brings these problems up, you have a seal either way that says it's groovy and all.
Speaker AThose fears are alleviated.
Speaker AIt always seems it's that inspection process, right, that this stuff comes up.
Speaker AAnd there's this.
Speaker AWhen I was working for that foundation company, we had two people that were in sales that just dealt with realtors.
Speaker AIt was just.
Speaker AYou didn't know where you're going tomorrow, but it was like you were filling in, just going, yeah.
Speaker CAnd usually what happens is foundation repair companies have figured out that very few of those turn into sales.
Speaker CSo what they do is they charge for those appointments, which is crazy because now they're really violating engineering laws.
Speaker CThey're providing engineering advice for a price.
Speaker CAnd you know what?
Speaker CThey're gonna go out there and they're gonna give you a little report with pictures and an estimate and a plan, maybe even a floor level, if you're lucky, floor level survey.
Speaker CBut no, nothing written.
Speaker CNo opinions written, because that would just be too scary for them to do, right?
Speaker ADr.
Speaker ADoing, you know, doing brain surgery in a storage unit.
Speaker CYeah, right.
Speaker CYeah, exactly.
Speaker AShouldn't be happening.
Speaker AShouldn't be happening.
Speaker AAnd that's the bad part with.
Speaker AAnd I wanted to talk about this, too, and it's something that's going around out there with these foundation repair companies.
Speaker AMany times the ones with the biggest advertising budget that show up on the Google searches with all the paid ads are showing up on your.
Speaker AMaybe they're not the ones you're supposed to call.
Speaker CWell, that's exactly right.
Speaker CThink about it.
Speaker CThere's been a big thing going on in the industry where private equity companies, or even just large companies, have been going around and buying up small mom and pops.
Speaker CWell, guess what?
Speaker CYou got a problem with the mom and pop.
Speaker CThey're probably going to listen to you.
Speaker CI owned a company for 35 years.
Speaker CI sold two years ago, and I see the way the company behaves now versus when it was my company.
Speaker CBig difference.
Speaker CYou're a big company and you're millions or billions of dollars in sales all over America.
Speaker CYou're not going to really care that much about some dinky little homeowner that's not happy it's just not going to happen.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWhere you're losing a $30,000 deal due to a complaint, something like that.
Speaker AYou have Mr.
Speaker AAnd Mrs.
Speaker AHomeowner upset and that business owner is all over it because that one Google review could kill them.
Speaker CAnd think about it.
Speaker CLet's just suppose that you decide to sue the company, okay?
Speaker CNow if you're suing a mall and pop, they're going to take it seriously.
Speaker CYou're suing a billion dollar company.
Speaker CThey don't care.
Speaker CThey're going to drag it out for four years and make and grind you down with $300,000 in expert testimony.
Speaker CThey don't care.
Speaker CNo.
Speaker AAnd they got their own legal team that's on staff.
Speaker AOh, yeah.
Speaker AThey're going to spend your money.
Speaker COh, yeah.
Speaker AYou know, absolutely insane how bad that goes.
Speaker AIt's just crazy.
Speaker AAnd so that's one of the things that's a little disheartening about.
Speaker AThat out there is much more about the mom and pops than some of these bigger companies.
Speaker ASo just because they show up at the top of your Google search doesn't always mean they're the right company.
Speaker CYep, I would agree with that 100%.
Speaker AWhat other advice can you give to people, Bob, about maybe exploring foundation issues on their home or at least maintaining that foundation when they're a homeowner, walking around and keeping an eye on things?
Speaker CWell, the name of the game is changes in moisture, okay?
Speaker CSo what you want to do is try to keep moisture as constant as you can.
Speaker CSo if you're in a dry area, you want to keep it dry.
Speaker CIf you're in a wet area, you want to keep it wet.
Speaker CNow the problem is, what do you do in an area that's wet half the time and dry half the time?
Speaker CYou want to try to even that out.
Speaker CI had a house in Flagstaff, which is northern Arizona, very snowy, big pine trees and a lot of clays.
Speaker CThere's a volcano there or a dead volcano.
Speaker CAnd the problem was, to make a long story short, the problem was that in the winter, the snows would come, they would melt, the water would go underneath the house and wet all those clays.
Speaker CAnd in the summertime, there was these huge trees that would suck all that soil back out.
Speaker CSo there was this huge action going on.
Speaker CAnd to boot, this happens a lot.
Speaker CThey put the guttering system in and they piped it down into a perforated drying drain.
Speaker CThey wanted.
Speaker CThey wanted to make the French drain and the drain for the gutters all in one, which is okay.
Speaker AWe're going to just put a super highway down to the drain.
Speaker CAwesome.
Speaker CA super high pressure injection system.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CYou know, and that just made it worse.
Speaker CBut bottom line is, one of the things that I developed for this project was a drying system that would go through those sands underneath the house and there would be a switch.
Speaker CYou just flick the switch on in the winter to keep it dry.
Speaker CYou turn it off in the summer and that kept it constant.
Speaker AThat is awesome.
Speaker CBoy.
Speaker ANowadays with smart home tech, you could just put a switch on that.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AAnd say, okay, on December 1st or whatever, that's going to turn on for this many hours a week and.
Speaker COh yeah.
Speaker COr you could even make a moisture sensitive switch.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AJust like you'd have a bath fan or something.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker ASimple.
Speaker AI like it.
Speaker AThat is smart.
Speaker AAnd that's one of the things that we see a lot here in our area, because we are that in my area at least that's that six months of the year it's raining.
Speaker AWe're raining here till June and then it's dead dry.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker AIt's the biggest cause of our foundation issues around here.
Speaker AAnd I can just drive down the street and see the white lawns in July and go, problems, problems.
Speaker AI could be, I could walk down that with door hangers if I was a foundation guy.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AYou just know what's going on without even looking at it.
Speaker CAnd the shame about that is that half of those problems might be he problems, not settlement problems.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AI had one house that, that I'd seen.
Speaker AAnd you could, you probably should write a book on the crazy things you've seen out there with pictures if you've got them.
Speaker COh yeah, sure.
Speaker AYou've got those.
Speaker AI had one where middle of winter, I got called out and again, this was someone missing.
Speaker AMaintenance day.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo in, in respect to the homeowner, his kids were living at home and they were adult kids.
Speaker AHe was a long haul truck driver.
Speaker ASo he comes home and goes, what happened to the kitchen?
Speaker AThe refrigerator's bound up against the refrigerator wall.
Speaker AAnd I'm like, oh, well, let me get down to the crawl space and take a look.
Speaker AIt's a 30 degree day outside.
Speaker AI pull the crawl space over, cover off in steam.
Speaker AI'm just running out.
Speaker AOh no.
Speaker AI got down there in the cast.
Speaker AActually.
Speaker AThe galvanized pipe that was coming off the washing machine off the drain had broken and was just.
Speaker AAnd they had a 50 gallon washing machine.
Speaker AIt's an old top load.
Speaker AEvery time they do a load of laundry, 50 gallons of hot water go down there.
Speaker AAnd there was three feet under the foundation right at the kitchen wall.
Speaker AAnd that whole kitchen had just sunk.
Speaker AYou could see it in the roof line.
Speaker CWow.
Speaker AAnd for them, I said, you know, a couple things.
Speaker AI talked to your insurance company first.
Speaker AThat actually might be an insurance issue.
Speaker AYou might be able to get away with that, and that's rare with foundations.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CWell, I'll tell you, I've.
Speaker CHere's the key.
Speaker CIf you have a floor level survey, you know, as a baseline, and now an event comes along like this and happens, and you can show that, okay, this was sudden and catastrophic.
Speaker CIt occurred after the pipe break.
Speaker CIt was caused by the pipe break.
Speaker CYou can probably have a fighting chance to get the insurance to cover it.
Speaker CI actually had insurance cover one of my rental houses that way and had all the documentation, had everything planned.
Speaker COne of the things that we do is we have a software that we provide for both engineers, contractors, and we're starting to train home inspectors that when you take the floor level survey, it pops it right into the computer program and does a colored 3D model that shows you where it's high and where it's low.
Speaker ACool.
Speaker CIt's really cool.
Speaker CAnd now, guess what?
Speaker CFive years from now, you can take the first values, subtract them from the second values, and.
Speaker CAnd it prints you a model of how it's moved in the intervening time.
Speaker CAnd that's super valuable.
Speaker CAnd so we're.
Speaker CWe're seeing a lot of people using this technology and benefiting from it.
Speaker AWow.
Speaker AAnd if you do that seasonally, you can really see where shrinkage heaves or whatever else is happening.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CBecause the old argument is, hey, it's low on this one side.
Speaker CWell, maybe it was poured that way.
Speaker COr how do we know?
Speaker CWell, guess what?
Speaker CIf six months ago it was this way and now it's this way, you can pretty well see a pattern of what's going on, right?
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd sometimes dropping down pushes up over here.
Speaker AAnd so we get to figure out what's going on.
Speaker COh, yeah, absolutely.
Speaker CIt's a bit of an art to understand a floor level survey because there's no benchmark.
Speaker CSo all you're doing is looking at relative elevations and trying to figure out, okay, what went up and what went down.
Speaker CAnd there's a bit of an art to it.
Speaker CAnd, you know, having that first one and the second one really helps with that ambiguity.
Speaker AMan, that is awesome.
Speaker AThat is awesome.
Speaker AWell, Bob, we're running out of time, but I want to make sure we cover how to find you how to find all your information because you are my foundation expert out there.
Speaker AIt's so refreshing to find somebody like you out there that really is helping out the consumer and the industry pros out there to be able to do this correctly.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CThat's my goal, is to try to help the homeowner get a fair deal.
Speaker CAnd if engineers, contractors and home inspectors have better tools, they're going to do a better job.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker CBest way to reach me is foundationrepairsecrets.com that's the easiest way.
Speaker CBut you can find me all over social media as the Dirt Whisperer and reach out to me.
Speaker CI'm happy to talk.
Speaker CI'm, I'm retired, basically.
Speaker CAlmost maybe.
Speaker CBut I'll respond to people all the time that have questions and concerns.
Speaker AYeah, you're retired, but you're inventing all these cool things and writing books, right?
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker ANot sure if that's retirement or not.
Speaker CI never sit still.
Speaker CThat's the problem.
Speaker AThat's my problem as well.
Speaker ABob Brown, thanks for coming on the Dirt Whisper.
Speaker AI appreciate your time and the education for the audience out there as well.
Speaker CAwesome.
Speaker CGlad to be here.
Speaker CThanks for having me.
Speaker AThanks, brother.
Speaker AI'm Eric G.
Speaker AAnd you've been listening to around the House.
Speaker BThank you so much for tuning in.
Speaker BEric G.
Speaker BWill be back next week all healed up with a brand new show.
Speaker BYou have been listening to the around the House show.