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

View the thread, titled "Mains Gas Supply Pipe Repair" which is posted in Air Sourced Heat Pumps Advice Forum on UK Plumbers Forums.

I was using a mini excavator in the front garden and cut the mains gas supply (website with gas location had it in the wrong place, but a disclaimer saying their info might be inaccurate - the engineer said it was probably moved when they changed the pipe to the new plastic sort).

1 Cadent engineer arrived at 10:00(approx) and said it was severed and he couldn't work on it alone. He sat waiting in his van for his colleagues; he left about 14:00.
2 Cadent engineers arrived (separate vans) at 12:00(approx) to fix the leak and left about 13:30.
The length of pipe was less than 1 metre, the pipe was already excavated 95% by me. They inserted replacement pipe from an offcut in their van and plastic-welded it together, checked the gas flowed to the house and left.

Does anyone have a recent cost that I could use to estimate with? Everything I've seen online is years old.
 
We had a similar one when they were digging for a new water main on my last job. They spoke about charges but as no figure was given the customer never got a bill, so unless they told you a price, fingers crossed it won't be billed.
 
Received the invoice today, total to pay £390.51 within 5 weeks of damage date.
 

Attachments

  • Cadent Invoice.jpg
    Cadent Invoice.jpg
    187.4 KB · Views: 52
How deep was it buried?
At the point it left the public footpath near our house it was estimated at 50cm, however the footpath is higher than our house, with the garden sloping down towards the house.
The excavator did not touch the pipe, the tree root growing around the pipe sheared it as the excavator pulled the tree up.

Cadent provide 3-pages of "Damage Claims - FAQ" with their invoice that, summarised, say
"We'll charge you, you pay it, regardless."
The FAQ list includes the good-old-favourites (paraphrased, and shortened):
  • Your engineer told me I wouldn't be charged.
    • We decide, not them.
  • What is the statutory depth?
    • There is none, only guidance, and
    • Pipes may have been moved, or the ground above lowered, after laying.
  • There was no warning tape or sand above it.
    • We don't have to do this.
  • The gas service pipe isn't on my drawings.
    • Service pipes aren't shown on drawings, dig to find them.
  • Why aren't the pipes in a straight line?
    • They are laid how the fitter thought they should have been laid.
  • My gas supply was already disconnected.
    • Cadent still own the apparatus, we'll charge if we think there's damage and
    • We'll charge if a non-Cadent gas engineer does anything, so we can check their work.
  • Why does Cadent send so many engineers?
    • We'll send a First Call Operative to tell you it's dangerous, and then
    • We'll send a team, separately, to repair the damage, and
    • The First Call Operator will stay until he wants to go, payable even if he's just standing around.
  • I've been invoiced for something that happened AGES ago.
    • Unfortunate, pay anyway.
 
Pay the bill and think yourself lucky, soon it will all be a funny story to tell in the pub.
Sometimes diy costs more than getting someone in, but you’ve also had fun on the digger - not much better things to spend £80 on to be honest!
 
It happens even to pros which I suspect you're not as you'd have public liability insurance but I'd really be more grateful the repair didn't really cost too much and the fact that you "helped" may have been reflected in the price. Nonetheless they were in end finished by lunchtime and you could carry on working.

You're still entirely responsible for not taking enough care when pulling up the tree even though the consequences of doing so may not have been entirely anticipated.
 
Pay the bill and think yourself lucky, soon it will all be a funny story to tell in the pub.
Sometimes diy costs more than getting someone in, but you’ve also had fun on the digger - not much better things to spend £80 on to be honest!
Still cheaper than getting someone in.

Cheapest quote was £1800 for what I wanted.
Digger was £400 (1.5T digger add fuel, insurance, delivery and VAT on top of their £180 advertised price).
Skip was £210 for 8 yard maxi builders skip.
£1 for a set of matches to make 2 bonfires.

Gas pipe repair at £390 still gives me a saving of £799 approx.
 
It happens even to pros which I suspect you're not as you'd have public liability insurance but I'd really be more grateful the repair didn't really cost too much and the fact that you "helped" may have been reflected in the price. Nonetheless they were in end finished by lunchtime and you could carry on working.

You're still entirely responsible for not taking enough care when pulling up the tree even though the consequences of doing so may not have been entirely anticipated.
public liability would not cover this claim if it was his own property. That might be covered under house insurance. Culpable neglect would be a primary consideration in this claim
 

Official Sponsors of Plumbers Talk

Reply to the thread, titled "Mains Gas Supply Pipe Repair" which is posted in Air Sourced Heat Pumps Advice Forum on Plumbers Forums.

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

Thread starter

Joined
Location
Lincolnshire
Member Type
DIY or Homeowner

Thread Information

Title
Mains Gas Supply Pipe Repair
Prefix
N/A
Forum
Air Sourced Heat Pumps Advice Forum
Start date
Last reply date
Replies
12
Unsolved
--

Thread statistics

Created
Samanddaniel,
Last reply from
hometech,
Replies
12
Views
3,905

Weekly or Monthly Email Digest

Back
Top