Crack in drywall?

Crack in drywall?

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Crack in drywall?
  #1  
Old 09-03-2025, 11:17 AM
MplsPete MplsPete is offline
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Default Crack in drywall?

We looked at some houses in TV. In one, in the main room, the walls on two sides rose to a peak, mirroring the roof. There was a vertical crack in the drywall going toward the peak.
Our VLS agent was dismissive about that; he said it was insignificant and common.
Is this true?
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  #2  
Old 09-03-2025, 11:52 AM
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villagetinker villagetinker is offline
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No idea if this is true (crack going to peak), but I would carefully look at the outside wall for a crack, and if I saw one I would walk away from the house.
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Old 09-03-2025, 12:19 PM
shut the front door shut the front door is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MplsPete View Post
We looked at some houses in TV. In one, in the main room, the walls on two sides rose to a peak, mirroring the roof. There was a vertical crack in the drywall going toward the peak.
Our VLS agent was dismissive about that; he said it was insignificant and common.
Is this true?
Your VLS "agent" is going to be dismissive about anything negative. Independent inspectors are your friends.
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Old 09-03-2025, 01:09 PM
Babubhat Babubhat is offline
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Why would you ask someone who likely has little experience in construction that question. These are sales people. Nothing more. No different than a car salesman.

Find a new agent immediately
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Old 09-03-2025, 05:07 PM
jimhoward jimhoward is offline
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It may or not be a problem, but it is not common. In order for a cathedral ceiling to have a crack in it, something had to move or perhaps warp, like one of the rafters.

Is it a new house?
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Old 09-03-2025, 07:04 PM
BrianL99 BrianL99 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MplsPete View Post
We looked at some houses in TV. In one, in the main room, the walls on two sides rose to a peak, mirroring the roof. There was a vertical crack in the drywall going toward the peak.
Our VLS agent was dismissive about that; he said it was insignificant and common.
Is this true?
If there's a "crack", there's a reason it occurred and 100% of the time, it's because something moved, shrunk, expanded or some such thing as that.

It's reasonably common. It's likely not a significant structural fault.

99.9% of the time, you can't easily fix it. If you try, the fix will likely only be temporary ... it will come back.
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Old 09-03-2025, 07:58 PM
retiredguy123 retiredguy123 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MplsPete View Post
We looked at some houses in TV. In one, in the main room, the walls on two sides rose to a peak, mirroring the roof. There was a vertical crack in the drywall going toward the peak.
Our VLS agent was dismissive about that; he said it was insignificant and common.
Is this true?
"Our VLS agent". If you didn't sign a contract with that agent where you agreed to pay them a fee, as a buyer, you do not have an agent. An agent represents you only if you agree to pay them for the representation. Otherwise, they represent the seller, not you.
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Old 09-03-2025, 08:42 PM
biggamefish1 biggamefish1 is offline
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It is called expansion and contraction. Hairline cracks happen in the tape joints between two or more pieces of drywall board. More common in a vaulted ceiling with sissor trusses. It is not a structural issue in any case. If it's a visual bother, have it retaped with fiberglass tape and refinished through texture for the strongest bond.
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Old 09-04-2025, 07:09 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by biggamefish1 View Post
It is called expansion and contraction. Hairline cracks happen in the tape joints between two or more pieces of drywall board. More common in a vaulted ceiling with sissor trusses. It is not a structural issue in any case. If it's a visual bother, have it retaped with fiberglass tape and refinished through texture for the strongest bond.
That should last a year or two and then he'll be back where he started.

It's not more common with scissor trusses, it's just as likely to occur with dimensional lumber framing. Using Fiberglass tape is a recipe for more trouble. Paper Taper is much better at absorbing tension movement and it's stronger. I'd bet the farm, Fiberglass tape was originally used and that's part of the problem.

The proper way to do it, likely involves creating floating joints.
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Old Yesterday, 06:11 AM
Ski Bum Ski Bum is offline
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If it's an Amarillo, or similar model, here's the answer. I own two Amarillos. My property manager says they most all crack there. I am a contractor, so I decided to investigate. I cut down the crack line. There is no stud at that joint. It seems to me that the drywall contractor tried to save a sheet, and/or a step, and just taped the joint without securing it.

I scraped the area, installed reinforced tape, then refinished and painted. That repair lasted a couple of years. The only way to permanently repair it is to cut the drywall away to the two nearest studs and install a new piece.
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Old Yesterday, 06:18 AM
bark4me bark4me is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MplsPete View Post
We looked at some houses in TV. In one, in the main room, the walls on two sides rose to a peak, mirroring the roof. There was a vertical crack in the drywall going toward the peak.
Our VLS agent was dismissive about that; he said it was insignificant and common.
Is this true?
Unfortunately all too common. Soil under the house not very compacted allowing too much settling
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  #12  
Old Yesterday, 06:28 AM
BrianL99 BrianL99 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by BrianL99 View Post

99.9% of the time, you can't easily fix it. If you try, the fix will likely only be temporary ... it will come back.
Quote:
Originally Posted by BrianL99 View Post
That should last a year or two and then he'll be back where he started.

... The proper way to do it, likely involves creating floating joints.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ski Bum View Post
...
I scraped the area, installed reinforced tape, then refinished and painted. That repair lasted a couple of years. The only way to permanently repair it is to cut the drywall away to the two nearest studs and install a new piece.
There you go. There's your answer.
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Old Yesterday, 06:51 AM
Miboater Miboater is offline
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I had a hairline crack in my vaulted ceiling in our front bedroom on new construction. I was naturally concerned and it was fixed right away. They cut out the suspect area and replaced the drywall and remudded the area. After they textured and repainted the area I cannot see the repair. It is going on 4 years and it no problems.
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Old Yesterday, 07:12 AM
retiredguy123 retiredguy123 is offline
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I have heard that, if you increase the size of the crack to about one-quarter inch, and fill it with a caulk that stays flexible, the repair will be permanent. I don't know if it works, because I have never tried it.
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Old Yesterday, 07:17 AM
BrianL99 BrianL99 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by retiredguy123 View Post
I have heard that, if you increase the size of the crack to about one-quarter inch, and fill it with a caulk that stays flexible, the repair will be permanent. I don't know if it works, because I have never tried it.
It will likely work, but it's a PIA to do and the color will almost always be off a little.

To say nothing of the fact, regardless of what the tube of caulk says, it will shrink.
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