Yes, but people that do this everyday have a different perspective and a rolladex of other's to call in to keep things on schedule. This guy sounds like the average homeowner, feels he's between a rock and a hard place at this point so is willing to put up with whatever because the wheels are in motion...progress is progress right? even if at the start of the job there are huge problems already...it'll get better right?? LOL We both know how this story will end from having to clean up these exact kind of messes, I do have some compassion for the OP and his situation, but I don't think most people realize tarps are cheap, and that they will be happier and money ahead cutting the head off the snake when it's already proven to be problematic, not once, but multiple times now.
Cut the losses now before they keep stacking up. This isn't a armchair quarterback situation where "we" all can tell a guy what to do from our lazy boy, it's just a fact of life. If the GC is already making excuses for this half baked, probably cheapest framing sub he could find...does anybody honestly think the rest of his "hand picked subs" are going to be any better?? They too will have now compounded problems to deal with since bad foundation+bad framing=everything else from here on out will be sheeot since everybody will be compromising to complete their tasks.
The old joke is finding a good finish carpenter is hard, because he's the last guy and must figure out a way to hide all the other trades hack jobs and make the job look legit. Been in that situation too, try doing stained crown on walls that are out of square, out of plumb, wavey...or doing doors and window casing on varying wall thicknesses around said opening that are also out of plumb/square, etc....it isn't fun.
By the way, the slab is perfectly level, not sure where the thought that the slab was sloped came from.
Fred


Well I know.
These armchair critics here are no better than your GC.
They saw your first photo and saw the sloping floor and
never for one moment considered the photo was taken on an angle ...![]()
By the way, the slab is perfectly level, not sure where the thought that the slab was sloped came from.
Fred

How so? Plumb is plumb. That's why you rack the wall AFTER it's stood up. Even if the studs were on the wrong side of the line, it could have been saved up until the sheathing went on. The layout is wrong too, but it could be worked around.The problems always seem to start at the bottom and just get worse from there as everything is a cluster trying to correct for the initial problems.
I too guess the foundation is what is screwing up this wall.
No..pretty much common sense coupled with deductive reasoning.
Just about every garage slab has fall in it to expell water and melting snow, etc.
Looking at first picture with the extreme wall racking going on, anybody with any sense had to assume the framers went full retard...which obviously they did thanks to pics, so it was a safe bet to say the slab was just pitched and they simply built the wall and stood it up.
And to speak about armchair quarterbacking...how about coming into a 5 page thread where discussion took place, advice offered, problem was solved...nice
Not really. If you've ever seen walls built you always put on at least one sheathing panel to keep the wall square when you set it up. Back East they sheath the whole wall on the ground and tyvek it too before standing up. A good framer does not put walls up until he's figured out and corrected any minor foundational issues.
Racking the wall to make up for a crummy foundation sounds pretty crummy.
The best solution for a crummy foundation is not to rack the wall but to shim the plate. A racked wall loses its bearing on the sole plate.
Find someone else to follow around.
If I've ever seen walls put up? I've been a general contractor since 1981 and in the trades since '68. You build your way and I'll build mine. My walls go up w/o any sheathing and when I bring all 4 corners into alignment, plumb, level and square, they get kick braced to straighten the plates and then get the roof. When that's all done and checked, then the Struct 1 plywood goes on and not before. In fact, I'd like to see the roof loaded before covering. I don't build mobile homes.
I've had changes in openings and other items come up and it's a hell of a lot easier to make the framing changes and repairs before sheathing. People here often don't know **** about building like the guy that wanted to know where the blocking was on 8' walls that were going to be covered with sheathing. I might put a couple of blocks at a door before plywood, but putting blocking in exterior walls to be covered is redundant.
If you don't believe me, go watch a tract go up. It's often another crew that does the plywood. It almost always is in the case of the roof sheathing.
Not to argue but what will it hurt to sheet the walls on the ground?
I built all my walls(26'x10' of 2x6) myself stacked on my slab and sheeted them so when I got help all we had to do was set the walls in place, finish the top sill, and put up trusses. Worked great and things went super smooth and quick for my limited time free help. I did the grade beam myself and new it was perfectly level and within 1/8" of square.
OP I think you need to keep an eye on them until you see an good point to let the GC go.
I was at the jobsite watching the trusses go up. No one had a copy of the bracing instructions from the truss manufacturer, and they looked at me funny when I asked. I called the company and had them email the diagrams and instructions, then printed copies and gave to GC and framing sub. They said "oh we do it this way, not that way". The instructions were engineering diagrams. I insisted and they agreed to follow them "as close as they could". That is reasonable since the diagrams were generic and my attic trusses could not be braced exactly the way shown, though certainly pretty close.
If I wouldn't have gone to all that trouble, who knows what would have been done.
Next up, I noticed they are not using ring shank nails to attach the OSB sheathing to the exterior walls. Looks like they stapled it then added framing nails, but it doesn't look like enough to me, and I doubt they followed any kind of standardized pattern. I have a buddy that does remodeling work and he made the remark to me when I asked him about my wall problem that removing the OSB would probably damage it because of the ring shanks used to hold it on. My GC said "we've never used them". My google research seems to support ring shanks.
What should I do, am I micromanaging now?
I'm concerned because the buildings wind resistance seems heavily dependent on the sheathing given the lack of any interior walls.
Fred
Well said. I'm with you there.If I've ever seen walls put up? I've been a general contractor since 1981 and in the trades since '68. You build your way and I'll build mine. My walls go up w/o any sheathing and when I bring all 4 corners into alignment, plumb, level and square, they get kick braced to straighten the plates and then get the roof. When that's all done and checked, then the Struct 1 plywood goes on and not before. In fact, I'd like to see the roof loaded before covering. I don't build mobile homes.
I've had changes in openings and other items come up and it's a hell of a lot easier to make the framing changes and repairs before sheathing. People here often don't know **** about building like the guy that wanted to know where the blocking was on 8' walls that were going to be covered with sheathing. I might put a couple of blocks at a door before plywood, but putting blocking in exterior walls to be covered is redundant.
If you don't believe me, go watch a tract go up. It's often another crew that does the plywood. It almost always is in the case of the roof sheathing.
Not to argue but what will it hurt to sheet the walls on the ground?
.
Ignore the retired tract house guys.


Not really. If you've ever seen walls built you always put on at least one sheathing panel to keep the wall square when you set it up. Back East they sheath the whole wall on the ground and tyvek it too before standing up. A good framer does not put walls up until he's figured out and corrected any minor foundational issues.
Racking the wall to make up for a crummy foundation sounds pretty crummy.
The best solution for a crummy foundation is not to rack the wall but to shim the plate. A racked wall loses its bearing on the sole plate.
Find someone else to follow around.
If I've ever seen walls put up? I've been a general contractor since 1981 and in the trades since '68. You build your way and I'll build mine. My walls go up w/o any sheathing and when I bring all 4 corners into alignment, plumb, level and square, they get kick braced to straighten the plates and then get the roof. When that's all done and checked, then the Struct 1 plywood goes on and not before. In fact, I'd like to see the roof loaded before covering. I don't build mobile homes.
I've had changes in openings and other items come up and it's a hell of a lot easier to make the framing changes and repairs before sheathing. People here often don't know **** about building like the guy that wanted to know where the blocking was on 8' walls that were going to be covered with sheathing. I might put a couple of blocks at a door before plywood, but putting blocking in exterior walls to be covered is redundant.
If you don't believe me, go watch a tract go up. It's often another crew that does the plywood. It almost always is in the case of the roof sheathing.

I was at the jobsite watching the trusses go up. No one had a copy of the bracing instructions from the truss manufacturer, and they looked at me funny when I asked. I called the company and had them email the diagrams and instructions, then printed copies and gave to GC and framing sub. They said "oh we do it this way, not that way". The instructions were engineering diagrams. I insisted and they agreed to follow them "as close as they could". That is reasonable since the diagrams were generic and my attic trusses could not be braced exactly the way shown, though certainly pretty close.
If I wouldn't have gone to all that trouble, who knows what would have been done.
Next up, I noticed they are not using ring shank nails to attach the OSB sheathing to the exterior walls. Looks like they stapled it then added framing nails, but it doesn't look like enough to me, and I doubt they followed any kind of standardized pattern. I have a buddy that does remodeling work and he made the remark to me when I asked him about my wall problem that removing the OSB would probably damage it because of the ring shanks used to hold it on. My GC said "we've never used them". My google research seems to support ring shanks.
What should I do, am I micromanaging now?
I'm concerned because the buildings wind resistance seems heavily dependent on the sheathing given the lack of any interior walls.
Fred
It maybe mentioned in here somewhere but I missed it. What kind of siding is going on?
Hardi-Plank fiber cement board lap siding
You are going to have to get ahead of your slack GC and have everything ready, nailing patterns for roof sheathing, shingles, whatever siding, etc etc
I'm afraid you may be right, but it really *****. I am no expert, I am an "internet expert" which is nowhere close to the real thing. I would hate it if someone did that to me in my real job, but then again I would provide a professional service and there is no way a layman would be more knowledgeable than me about my profession. If that ever occurs, it's time wake up and realize you ****. Either up your game or find a new line of work.
Have you called the building inspection department and gotten any feedback?
Yes I talked to the building inspector about my wall problem. A framing inspection will be done soon. However, he said the inspection is for code and safety issues, not quality per se.
Zeke....you know me and I have never disputed what you have said. And maybe it's a West Cost East Coast thing, but I'm with MrMark. Around here they will either sheet an entire wall on the concrete or floor of a house, then stand the wall up. They take the rack out of it before it is ever set. That's what I said what I did above. It is a rarity anymore to see someone frame a house, then go back and add the sheeting afterwards.![]()
Depth of nailing is ever as important as spacing. Sink them into the wood at all and you fail inspection. It has nothing to do with standing up walls.
I don't know if I deserve the mention as many don't agree with me. I know the last job I supervised I ran off 2 different framing outfits. They were doing stuff similar and going so fast I couldn't fix the mistakes fast enough working a couple of hours a day past quitting time. I finally called a time out and said don't come back.OP, how about posting up a BUNCH of interior pics of corners, windows, garage door openings, etc??
Might as well get some free GC from Zeke as your GC seems like total greenhorn or patsy (what legit GC would EVER blindly support sub when wall is racked as poorly that homeowner discovered)!! As homeowner you should NOT have to instantly become expert on concrete work and framing, but your GC is so piss poor that's exactly what's happening.
Push your thumb down HARD on GC requiring him to provide you timely QUALITY checks where GC is emailing/texting you pictures and feedback on quality checks he is doing on-site. If GC refuses to provide those to you, it tells a pretty good story that GC is NOT checking the subs work!! Also, this sets the stage that homeowner should short-pay the GC for his "supervision" fee when the homeowner has been the one doing this function anyway.
Good luck rest of build. Squeeky wheel gets the grease !! SCREAMING wheel gets the new wheel bearing !! Your GC is not even hearing the screaming wheel bearing !!
Titan HD's are OK, but epoxy anchors are way better by tension load tables. The worst are the expanding anchors. Just because something is allowed by some local code doesn't mean it's quality. Code is a minimum standard, not aspirational.
********.
The wood plate will fail long before a properly installed Titen HD will. Period.


