Yes it does. What amazes me, is I have a construction attorney in my pocket. I also work as an expert witness in court cases. 9 out of 10 clients are embarrassed and will not pursue them legally to get their money back
I've done most of my own work for decades. My own home, and a lot of flips. Now I'm older and just can't/won't do it anymore so I interview "contractors" to do work. Most of them are clueless. If you find one that knows what they're doing, hold onto them like grim death.
@johnluna7689 no misunderstanding sir. I assumed that's exactly what you meant. I'm going to have to start doing more of these, I fixed probably 10 bad contractor jobs a year. I'm going to go to this client's home and do an after video so everyone can see what it's supposed to look like when it's done correctly.
Red guard wasn't always used when I started 20years ago . No red guard, but I agree it's better with red guard but Not a make or break deal. He could have red guarded tje lower half . The half the really matters,and would have been fine
I remember when Red Guard came out. I've tried to have the attitude of my whole career not to dismiss new technologies. If something new comes out, we at least go visit, have a look at it as a team, and decide whether or not we will implement it. Obviously Redguard was one of those things we decided to implement. LOL
All of that tile was poorly set. The grout wasn’t done right either, looks like they let it sit too long on the curb at least, and or didn’t wipe it but one time.
I hear you loud and clear! They're getting a lot better. They removed that old ugly track on the bottom and as long as we pitched the curb they seem to be working fairly well. Of course check back in 5 years from now and let's see how it does
I have had meetings with the city, I believe that tile work should be inspected. Like doctors, contractors come with a reasonable expectations of trust. Unfortunately, this is quite common with limited recourse.
I had a contractor put tile on drywall and even left drywall exposed on the entry. Didn't even survive one shower and he spent 6 months on the job. Everything was wrong... everything.
@@IliadDreyfus-js9oe Unfortunately Missouri has a "Right to Cure" law before I can fire a contractor that has taken a lien out on my house. Would be nice if I lived in a world without laws overwhelmingly protecting businesses instead of consumers.
Education on youtube is great, but you also need lots of different tools and practice in tiling. Then realise that education on youtube was pretty bad 😢
There's no excuse for this. Too bad she can't make a "malpractice" claim against the contractor. If you don't know what you're doing, spend a little extra and use a Kerdi system. I'm learned how for just my shower and ripped out my old shower almost 10 years ago and did it Schluter's way, used the Kerdi sheets (before Kerdi board) and a "perfect" shower was easy.
The powers-that-be are way too gentle on illegal contractors. I take over probably six of these a year. I am licensed and bonded, which means if I make a really bad mistake and and won't come out and repair it, she can call the city and they will pay her out of my bond, and I can't pull permits until I replace the money in the bond. An illegal contractor, nothing
The sliding door is inside out. Look at how the spray will just go between the 2 panes. Her trick of entering by the toilet lets the doors be opposite ends in use, but it is odd and you usually set the temp before entering
@@MrBigHoss this is Nashville Tennessee. No, we use a combination of old technology and new technology building a four layered redundant system . We guarantee the showers for Life providing the house does not move.
No, no, no , Take vanity place it on wall , 180 degrees opposite shower, the wall the door swings open to, Now you have opened up the room , Place full mirror above vanity, to ceiling, to reflect glass shower doors and skylight, this will really make this airy- to make this happen you make the door a POCKET door, which locks Now with the wall , with the toilet , add a bidet, for balance, over time the bidet will pay for itself, and will balance the room out, Not knowing what type of heat , however now on this wall, add some heating, now she will have a real bathroom. P.S please change your RU-vid name, to something like Done right contracting, Or integrity builders , as your content is spot on , however hard to remember your channel’s name , great work, keep moving,
Thank you for your input! You may be right on the name, they're beginning to show a little. The client just doesn't have the money to do anything other than replace it as is. And that's the way her and her husband wanted it from the beginning.
do you really think Home Depot would be carrying a product that has a high risk of failure for decades if it didn't work? Human error =/= product failure.
You can't reuse the door it's missing parts, you might have missed this the gap under the sliding door there should be a metal water stop that came with the unit. If you reuse it it will be this video in the next issue of CONTRACTOR FAILS.