u/Born_Cap_9284

Image 1 — Selling late mother in laws home and some previous plumbing work looks very off to me despite it being a licensed plumbers work... Am I wrong?
Image 2 — Selling late mother in laws home and some previous plumbing work looks very off to me despite it being a licensed plumbers work... Am I wrong?
Image 3 — Selling late mother in laws home and some previous plumbing work looks very off to me despite it being a licensed plumbers work... Am I wrong?

Selling late mother in laws home and some previous plumbing work looks very off to me despite it being a licensed plumbers work... Am I wrong?

I plan on recommending the trust hire a licensed plumber to either replace these pipes or issue a credit to the buyer so they can hire who they wish to do the work. I am not a professional plumber but I know enough to be able to do small projects and stuff around the house but I cant get around these photos and what appears to me to be sloppy or rushed plumbing work.

These pipes supply water to the tankless water heater that is located in the attic. At some point my late mother in law got rid of their standard tanked heater in the garage and moved to a tankless and put it in the attic.

Our buyers general home inspector noted corrosion and potential self sealed leaks in the subject piping and I just received the report.

Why does it appear that there are 6 pipes, including the elbows, in the middle photo? Is there a legitimate reason for that? Why would it not just be 1 pipe since there are no connectors there? Also does the solder also look very armature to anyone else?

Am I completely out of my depth here or is this poor workmanship? obviously the leaks sort of answer this question but still want outside thoughts. I was told this was done by a licensed plumber in the area..... Feel free to roast.

u/Born_Cap_9284 — 8 days ago