Contractor horror stories? OK. My then-girlfriend now-wife bought a house with a 3-car garage, only to find it was too short to get her '72 chevy pickup in. She called a very reputable overhead door company to lengthen it and replace two of the doors with one 16'. Supposedly reputable company subbed out the extension work to a *****, who:
1: tried to get paid completely up front.
2: didn't get building permit
3: made footings too shallow (2')
4: made footings too narrow (4")
5: made slope of new roof much too flat (1" over 4')
6: didn't flash the join to old roof; practically just butted new roll roofing against old shingles.
7: made NO overhang on addition.
8: tried to get paid again, after the prime contractor had paid him.
Result: within a year or two, the new section of roof had rotted badly, and the new door was well on the way due to no protection from rain. I ripped out the whole sorry mess of a roof extension, made all new rafters tying into the old 8" higher, added 18" of overhang, properly flashed and underlaid the join to the old shingles, shingled the extension, added a gutter, and repainted the new doors. (Well, actually she did most of the painting)
Oh, yeah, the prime contractor did do a good job installing the doors, but repeat business? NFW
So, one marriage and 26 years later, it came time to re-roof the garage. Not a single piece of wood under that extension needed replacing. So if a rank amateur can do that good a roofing job, why didn't the full time pro? Gee, could the fact that she was a single woman have anything to do with it?
1: tried to get paid completely up front.
2: didn't get building permit
3: made footings too shallow (2')
4: made footings too narrow (4")
5: made slope of new roof much too flat (1" over 4')
6: didn't flash the join to old roof; practically just butted new roll roofing against old shingles.
7: made NO overhang on addition.
8: tried to get paid again, after the prime contractor had paid him.
Result: within a year or two, the new section of roof had rotted badly, and the new door was well on the way due to no protection from rain. I ripped out the whole sorry mess of a roof extension, made all new rafters tying into the old 8" higher, added 18" of overhang, properly flashed and underlaid the join to the old shingles, shingled the extension, added a gutter, and repainted the new doors. (Well, actually she did most of the painting)
Oh, yeah, the prime contractor did do a good job installing the doors, but repeat business? NFW
So, one marriage and 26 years later, it came time to re-roof the garage. Not a single piece of wood under that extension needed replacing. So if a rank amateur can do that good a roofing job, why didn't the full time pro? Gee, could the fact that she was a single woman have anything to do with it?






