"Capt. Rob" wrote in message
ups.com...
Actually it is a 2" column when you account for the screw at the top
of the
lolly. Why isn't it encased in drywall? Code violation#1. No handrail
on the
stairs. Code Violation #2. Either the basement floor lifted or the
exterior
wall sunk. That beam is bent.
Wrong again. 4 inch column is standard and does not require a cosmetic
enclosure to be up to code. In fact there are companies that make
plastic, wood and even fabric covers for them, but they are not
required.
I was talking about fire protection for the steel column. It's in the UBC,
IRC.
The 2" extended screw is the weakest link in the column.
There is a handrail on the staircase. The beam had no load
deflection nor does the one in the guest room which also had the pole
removed.
Looking at the picture the beam does not look straight. It looks like it has
a butt joint right above the column and the column is too tall. It wasn't
aligned properly when installed or the relative positions of the basement
floor and foundation have changed.
Done by photoshop.
Wow! Really???? Of course you really just admitted you're impressed by
suggesting that...and THANKS!
You are welcome. I believe you have the talent to do just that. Those videos
you did for the sail company were pretty good.
The acoustics in that room are going to be shameful. Such a low
ceiling and
highly reflective walls. Are you a troglodyte? Deaf? Cheap stereo?
Outside of a real sound room, the room is about the flattest around.
Measured by what? You ear?
The floor is concrete and three walls are drywall over wood.
A wooden foundation?
Even
empty there is no audible reflections.
The room is so small the cutoff frequency is so high I doubt you could tell
anything.
I may actually have to add a
sub and tweak for more HF response, but we'll see.
HF response in that room is essentially free space, especially since you
claim no reflections. It's the LF that needs help.
Did you get your radon checked? 35% chance in your area you are
over 4.7
pc/L.
Don't you know anything about engineers for NY state? Radon check is
done twice and required by the insurance co. DId you know that a
proper test must be partially invasive on the ground floor? Of course
you didn't.
Whatever. Go to the EPA site to see what is required. Do you know that
radons levels can vary greatly over the year and readings taken one time are
only a snapshot measurement. If you are interested in radon here's a
continuous monitor for $90:
http://radonmonitor.com/
I use a continuous monitor and over the course of a year the levels vary
from 0 pc/L to over 12 pc/L in my basement.
If you needed two invasive tests for radon it sounds like you had to get
some special government financing for the mortgage on your home. Is that why
all your assets are in Suzy's name?