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Thank you for the excellent research! I think I might have made the
problem out more serious then it sounded. When I stated I can stick
my finger in a few spots I didn%26#39;t mean all the way through... my
finger isn%26#39;t quite two feet long. :)
Looks like I got a fun project ahead of me next week. I%26#39;ll let you
know how it goes! Thanks again! Jayson,
I was going to take a shot at answering your question, since I
enjoy restoration work myself, but I wasn%26#39;t having much luck finding
the excact info you%26#39;re looking for and didn%26#39;t want to prevent another
researcher from giving it a shot. Your might find the following link
interesting:
http://www.soundhome.com/consult/211to220.shtml#212
Even though the guy is not in favor of do-it-yourself, he has some
good tips. Sandstone seems to have been more common in barn than house
foundations, though it probably depends on what region you live in.
Good luck.
morris-ga I was going to take this one on as well, and even had it locked and
ready. Also, finding very little on the Internet to %26quot;repair%26quot; I
resorted to making a phone calls to experts. What I found was that
%26quot;replace%26quot; was the only real way to go and that %26quot;repair%26quot; was probably
going to cost you more than taking it out and redoing the whole thing.
I didn%26#39;t find a single contractor willing to even think about %26quot;repair%26quot;
and I%26#39;m sure you have had the same experience. What I would suggest is
that you consider the reason for this may be because its not a good
idea.
Anyway, with everything I was finding, I decided to let another try to
find options for you, after all everyday someone is doing something
someone else said was impossible, so you might find you can %26quot;repair.%26quot;
webadept-ga Glad I released it. missy-ga got game!
morris-ga Nah, missy got Home Depot within sight of the front door!
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