Welcome to the forum. Although you can post in any forum, the USA forum is here in case of local regs or laws

Install the app
How to install the app on iOS

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.

Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.

Oct 22, 2020
10
1
3
Member Type
Other Tradesman
Hello just joined and my 1st post on here .

My friend has had a new combi boiler fitted then asked the same engineer a few months later to install 2 double panel radiators where the 2 single small panel ones were too small ,( they worked great got piping hot but there was just not enough output to heat the rooms .

So 2 double panel and a bit bigger in size radiators were fitted ,he refilled the system ,turned the heating on and after 30 mins both were stone cold ,so he turned off every thermostat valve off and waited ,both got slighly warm , then says he's got to go to another job and tells my friend to leave the valves off for another 20 mins then open them up .
My friend asked " what if this doesn't work?" ,
He replys he would come out next week take the radiators off and check to see if there is a blockage and if there isn't then he cannot do any more unless she pays him to put new pipework in or investigate further ,as his job was to " fit the new radiators and valves" and that's what he's done ,i'm fuming i've told my friend he's talking cr@p and its his job to leave the job with the new radiators red hot .

The heatings been on 2 hrs and 3 radiators upstairs are bouncing , but the 2 new ones downstairs one is stone cold and the other is warm at most at the top the other 4 downstairs are warm to hot.
To me the whole system needs bleeding then balancing .

So to all you heating engineers is it accectable to leave a job like this ? i don't think so ,but is he right in saying his quote was to fit 2 new radiators and valves and thats it ! .obviously when fitting the new radiators air etc has got in the system so surely when he refills the system he needs to bleed and balance them ?
 
Updated after your reply ?

The first post of this thread states she had a boiler installed

Are you a wind up ?
How is a nurse supposed to know a good job from a bad job ?

She is taking the small claims court route.

5 months She has been waiting for replys from H@S and Gas safe, they have been dragging there heels not her.

And as for brushing aside and "Forget the non gas safe registed bit "REALLY !

A non qualified gas installer who is still installing and could kill a family and you say "Lifes too short" you need to take a reallity check and give your head a shake ! .

And that probably answers the whole issue.

Right.

1. There was no mention in your original, that is post #1, of a non gas safe bloke fitting the combi. Just that your 'friend' had used the same bloke.

2. Again I state if the bloke did a bad job then why get them to come back to do the radiators. Dont give me the crap about shes a nurse and doesn't know what a good job is. What checks did she do prior to hiring this bloke to fit the boiler. Check his name on the gas safe register? Ask to see his gas safe card when he arrived? Checked out previous work? Obviously not.

3. You've been down the gas safe route, did they come and inspect it? Has anybody inspected it? Has it been deemed dangerous?

4. You've been down the H and S route. Same questions.

5. To overcome your friends concerns have you had an independent engineer check it over to confirm the safety of the appliance and the installation. Surely a small price for peace of mind, but probably not.

6. Shes taking the small claims route, good.

7. Is this posturing of yours really going to get you into her knickers.

FFS get a life.
 
Right...

1.She didnt know at the time he wasn't registed

2.She is not a heating engineer or inspector therefore does not know a good job from a bad job, she got a reccomendation from a friend at work as he had installed a new boiler for them .

3.The Gas board came out when she found out it was illegally installed
And They shut it down .

A qualified engineer came out put a few things right , including the flue and stated it was a rough job and turned it back on.

4.H&S just looked at the evidence and believed/ sided with the lying installer

5.see no 3

6 yes

7.You need to grow up and get a life , how would you feel if this plumber illegally installed a boiler in one of your loved ones homes ?
You defend him like i'm lying about it all ,I came on here for help / advice but got nowt strange forum , i'm leaving after this post so don't bother replying find another target you little keyboard warrior .

If all you can say to someone who's reporting a cowboy who could kill a family with a badly installed boiler or blow up a house " get a life"
well that sums up what type of man/ boy you are and i'd hate to see your work

End of thread
 
1. She could have easily checked.
2. Should have checked his gas safe credentials.
3. First time you've said that. Just give the full story at the start rather than drop feeding info to match your narrative.
4. Again no previous mention of anyone even looking at the boiler.
5. That's unfortunate that H & S sided with the installer, especially if the initial install was shutdown.
6. Again, try the actual full story at the start.
7. He wouldn't install a boiler in anybody's home that I know. a. Because I tell people to check the engineers credentials before they let them in the house. b. Most people I know would ask for a recommendation of a good engineer and I would only give them somebody who was gas safe registered.
8. If the guy is not registered then he shouldn't be working on gas, full stop.
9. Try working on the people skills, get much further than the stinking attitude you have shown on here. Brings out the best in me too.
10. You would never see my work, my spidey senses weed out the weirdos and cranks when I go to price a job.

To be honest theres just something that just doesn't sit right with all of this. Start with one story, moves to another story, it's just off.

At the end of the day the install had to be shutdown, works rectified but nobody's interested! Somethings off.

Learning point for others looking in on this is to ensure somebody coming into your house to work on gas is qualified to do so. Ask to see 'their' gas safe id and check to make sure that they are qualified to do the work they are there to do.
If you're friend had done this, then she wouldn't have had a problem.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Ric2013
I think everyone is being more than a bit harsh here, but at the same time, I don't generally disagree with anyone.

The OP is understandably frustrated.

The problem is that, as SimonG has said in post 25, we are being dripfed information. Whether the boiler was legally or illegally installed is not necessarily relevant to the radiator upgrade issue which is what we were originally asked to comment on, but let me give my ha'p'orth. Essentially, if a RGI has looked at the installation, said it was a bit rough but switched it back on (rather than note the system is At Risk or Immediately Dangerous), then the RGI obviously felt it was safe to do so.

There is, of course, a minefield of legalislation pertinent to the original installation being not installed by a RGI, and while we could give advice as to how you should proceed if you want to give us, clearly and concisely, the full details in chronological order of what happened, you have, instead, been trying to get us on your side. In practice, there are plenty of gas-safe installers that work alongside unqualified personnel. While the spirit of the law is that the work will always be overseen at every stage, the law is an bum in that, clearly the RGI will not always be in the same room as they are. So while you may be right that the RGI should not be sodding off early, you'd be equally right that the apprentice should probably stop work while the RGI goes to the toilet. But how can we possibly help if neither the HSE and Gas Safe does not plan to prosecute? It's not going to help a court case if some bloke on a web-forum (that you have previously dismissed as a keyboard-warrior) thinks your friend's installer is a cowboy. By all means instigate civil proceedings if you think you can win, and I, genuinely, wish you both all the best with this.

Reverting to the title question of October, what if you'd called me out to change the radiators (or what would a responsible workman do in this situation)? I would have made you aware that my quoted price related to fitting the new radiators and getting the system running but that I could not guarantee the new radiators would receive sufficient flow as I was connecting to existing pipe work. But then I have worked in a contracts office and have some experience with the wording of £100,000+ contracts so perhaps I cover myself more than is strictly necessary and I'm aware I may lose work out of this. Realistically, however, if the job was to change two radiators then your friend cannot expect a pipework upgrade if that proves necessary.

I think, if the radiators were 'only slightly warm' (and I can't know what that means as this is presumably you recounting to us what your friend - who is not a plumber - has told you) then I would also have turned off the other radiators and seen what happened. This would hopefully clear airlocks and restore flow, but would, temporarily, have the same effect as balancing the system, so we know that balancing and bleeding are not enough. Obviously I would not be able to balance the system if the new radiators are not heating through, so if there is not a problem with the goods supplied and fitted that day, there would now need to be a discussion: what does the customer want done? If the customer does not want to pay any extra, then I too would, reluctantly, leave the job like that. It does, however, sound strange that, however bad the pipework, the new radiators do not work fully when the other radiators are isolated and I, personally, would want to investigate. In the nicest possible way, however, I do ask myself, could it be that your friend may have approached the matter with the attitude that the plumber is " talking cr@p and its his job to leave the job with the new radiators red hot"? Because I have a lot of time for people, but faced with a customer who views me in that way, I too would be reluctant to return to site.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Timmy D and SimonG

Official Sponsors of Plumbers Talk

Similar plumbing topics

We recommend City Plumbing Supplies, BES, and Plumbing Superstore for all plumbing supplies.