Quite a few round here, not those companies with the flashy showrooms and pretty receptionists though.
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OK, so here's a breakdown of what happened, without any swing on it.
In hindsight I know I've been foolish with quotes etc, but at the moment having found out more information from your good selves, I'm not sure how legal this installation has been full stop.
Our metal oil tank had rusted heavily, and needed replacing due to danger of oil leaks.
My partner's father is a builder, so I gave him a ring to find out about plumbers, if it needed a new base, etc.
He came round, saw what had happened, and said he'd sort it all out, that it wouldn't cost more than £600 worst case.
Him and the plumber in question came round, on day one they drained the old tank and made the concrete base.
On day two, they both came, lifted the replacement tank onto the base, and filled it up/connected it.
At this point my partners father left, to save time/money. The plumber spent the next 3-4 hours trying to find why it wasn't starting properly, and after this time admitted defeat and called the boiler engineer out the next day, who fitted the new tiger loop.
So breakdown of costs with no 'sugar coating';
Partner's father, £250 labour and base materials, £200 oil tank (2 year old double bunded sourced second hand), he had done some work for us prior and didn't include a breakdown of labour, he had helped us with some woodwork in the house prior to this, included in this bill.
Plumber, £300 labour at £25/hour (12 hours), £26 parts (non return valve?)
Boiler chap, £170 for tiger loop + labour, and at present can't find his bill, but I believe it was around £35/hour labour off the top of my head, for 3 hours, and then rest was materials.
I suppose at this point (despite I'm sure this is largely my own stupidity in not checking things and trusting my partners father to sort things out legally) I should really be worrying how legal this installation is, and what I need to do to rectify any legal issues.
From what I (now) know, the plumber isn't OFTEC, and no building inspection has occurred on the oil tank installation.
Once again, I'm aware of how bad a situation this could be, and how I'm to blame.
I pretty much want to just get this sorted, regardless of cost at this point, due to having insurance worries, etc.
Did you also complain to your plumber for him getting it all sorted for you ???Hey there, had some unfortunate problems with a local plumber.
We needed a new oil tank fitting, and as my partners father is a builder, he recommended us a plumber and sourced us a tank, cement for new base, and any other parts that were needed to install said tank.
The plumber came on day 1, and helped make the base while coming to diagnose a separate plumbing problem.
He spent around 4 hours working in the morning, dithered about my house for around an hour talking to himself while refusing to go in the loft as the problem 'wasn't up there' (despite it being an overflow leak, which turns out is from the hot water tank in the loft, as found by another plumber), took around an hour lunch, and went home.
Day 2, he came back to connect the oil tank up after lifting it onto the base and filling it with the oil from our old tank. He spent around 2-3 hours on this, at which point the boiler wasn't heating up properly. He spent a further 3 hours 'trying to work out' what the problem was, constantly changing his mind and talking to himself about what it could possibly be, going off to get a replacement part (that wasn't the problem), and generally not doing much. He probably took around an hour and a half to get the part + have lunch.
Day 3 he's decided he can't fix the problem, as it's a tiger loop failure (no idea what this is sadly, not a plumber), and gets in a boiler engineer to fix it. However, he decides to come along and supervise the boiler chap (I have no idea as to if this is a 1 or 2 man job) for around 3 hours.
At the end of the work, I advise him I'm not happy, and I'm not willing to pay him for all the time spent. He was very apologetic and said he wouldn't be charging full hours as he knows he'd spent too long, etc etc.
Got the bill through, and he's charged 12 hours labour, deducting 2.5 hours.
Also got charged 3 hours labour and parts from the boiler chap.
Is this a reasonable amount of time to spend doing the work (am I being irrational), or is the chap just looking for an easy pay day?
Sadly I have no quote from before the job was taken, as my partners father dealt with hiring him, and he informed us to install the new tank would cost 'no more than £400 total worst case'. Thus far it's cost around £900 with the father in law undercharging due to 'family rates', the boiler chap, and the plumber.
Any help would be greatly appreciated, if there's anything I can do, if I'm being unreasonable, etc etc.
Cheers!
Wheres this garage that only charges £35 an hour 🙂
In the West Midlands!... It's not worth the risk Simon!
brilliant set of posts that lead me to think that your better off paying full price for a new tank through an oftec registered technician, but I would say that 🙂 and my prices would include a working boiler 🙂
.I could be wrong but OFTEC isn't a requirement is it? I thought you could install yourself and notify, not 100% certain though.
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Yes if you install it yourself you can pay £200 for a Building Inspector to sign it off. But the customer did not install it themselves so the plumber is acting illegally if they do not notify it. Also if it is a second hand tank, is it a single skinned tank? If so, I would be very wary.
I repeat, do NOT hand over any money until you have the CD11 certificate and the Building Control certificate. This is an absolute legal requirement and the installer has a duty to provide these and you are totally within your rights to with hold payment until you have them. Without them you have an illegal installation and your insurance is potentially invalid.
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