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Structural Inspections Contains discussions about the structural portion of a home inspection. This includes foundations, framing, etc.

 
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  #1  
Old 3/22/11, 12:36 AM
Stephen P. Shockley's Avatar
Stephen P. Shockley Stephen P. Shockley is offline
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Default Steel plate shims

Hi,

I had this house that I inspected last weekend that had these steel plate shims on top of every pier, except for one. It looks as though whoever did the block work had every Pier set about 3/8" to 1/2" to low. Is this standard practice in construction, because I've never seen it before until now where it was on every Pier. There was one Pier with nothing on it and had a gap above to the girder. Any thoughts appreciated.

Regards,

Steve
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  #2  
Old 3/22/11, 1:29 AM
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Default Re: Steel plate shims

Not a problem. If as a contractor you set piers too high, you have a problem... humps in the floor. Getting them all close to perfect is possible but time consuming (expensive). If you set them slightly low, common practice is to shim girders with steel shims (that won't compress over time) to make everything flat and level. Very common practice and perfectly acceptable. If you see piers with no shims... the floor is probably not flat and level, or the contractor didn't make any money, or the original homeowner paid too much.




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Last edited by kshepard; 3/22/11 at 1:32 AM..
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  #3  
Old 3/22/11, 7:06 AM
Wayne B. Wilson's Avatar
Wayne B. Wilson Wayne B. Wilson is offline
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Default Re: Steel plate shims

I agree, The problem we have here they use OSB or Plywood for shims sometimes.



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  #4  
Old 3/22/11, 9:38 PM
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Stephen P. Shockley Stephen P. Shockley is offline
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Default Re: Steel plate shims

Kenton, for the one pier where they didn't use a shim and there is an apparent gap of about 3/8", would you recommend that the gap be filled in with some metal plate?



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  #5  
Old 3/23/11, 1:10 AM
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Default Re: Steel plate shims

I once had a local code official make me jack up the steel "I" beam of a house I built and replace my steel shim with one manufactured as a shim. What was my steel shim? I used a worn out circular saw blade. I tried to explain to him that a circular saw blade is made of better steel than the shim he wanted, but he wouldn't listen to reason. I sent him the old blade in the mail for Christmas.



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  #6  
Old 3/23/11, 11:19 AM
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Stephen P. Shockley Stephen P. Shockley is offline
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Default Re: Steel plate shims

Thanks to everyone else for their comments and advice. Regards, Steve



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  #7  
Old 3/24/11, 12:36 AM
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Default Re: Steel plate shims

Quote:
Originally Posted by sshockley View Post
Kenton, for the one pier where they didn't use a shim and there is an apparent gap of about 3/8", would you recommend that the gap be filled in with some metal plate?
Yep... pretty easy to do. Then you have solid bearing.




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