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DerbyDad03 DerbyDad03 is offline
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Default Questioning faucet install charges

On Mar 23, 12:25*am, Steve Kraus
wrote:
Did anyone think to ask for an estimate, *guesstimate, price per hour
and/or anything in writing?


No, not for what should have been a trivial job. *For a big job, sure. *For
a little job, no. *

Its kind of hard to argue after the fact when they have already
completed the work, you paid them and then you go back and cancel the
check.


Excuse me but who said anything about cancelling a check? *Certainly not
me. *No one is cancelling a check or even asking for a refund.

I take those kind of checks straight to the
county prosecuting attorney. Thats what they are for.


Fascinating but completely off topic.

Should she have asked for estimates first? *Clearly yes since there are
plumbing contractors out there who charge senior citizens almost 500
dollars for what was likely a 150-250 dollar job.

Water under the bridge. *But you're wrong if you think I have no business
even raising the question. *If someone walks through a bad neighborhood in
the middle of the night flashing a lot of cash and jewels and they get
robbed you can fairly call them foolish. *But that doesn't make it any less
a crime. *(Only an analogy; I'm not saying this was a crime. *Just in
spirit.)


getting estimates...

First you said: No, not for what should have been a trivial job.
Then you said: Clearly yes.

Which is it?

I can't think of any situation where one shouldn't need to ask for an
estimate when contracting a service. The fact that there are
unscrupulous contractors that will rip off naive clients is just *one*
of many reasons to get an estimate.

Piece together some of the other things mentioned in this thread:

- No main shutoff in the house
- Non-standard installation of the current fixtures
- A mess above and below the sink
- Location of plumbing that makes access time consuming
- etc. etc.

Asking upfront opens the window for the contractor to say "I charge
$80 and hour. A typical faucet install takes 2 hours." If he doesn't
offer details as to what could make the install non-typical, you
should ask. Then everyone knows upfront what the cost range of the job
could be and the correct decisions can be made.

Part of this conversation should also include questions about
insurance, clean-up and warranty.

In plumbing, as with many other repair jobs, the expectation of a
"trivial job" is a dangerous assumption and should be inquired about
upfront.