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#1
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Recently, I had a tile backsplash done in my kitchen. It required
approx. 30 sq ft of coverage of 4 x 4'' tiles.. The guy had to remove my old Formica backsplash, and then installed cement drywall. In this process he also hard wired a new kitchen hood from an old outlet that was at the bottom base behind the range. Originally, he was going to make a hole in my cabinet above the stove so he can exhaust thru an opening he would have to make to the outside wall. He asked for $2000 for the job. I thought first that was kind of high, but thought well there is some labor in making that opening to the outside brick wall. IN the process, the purchased hood could only allow a 7" hole and he said its not possible because of the size of the cabinet and etc..he was planning on a 4'' hole at the max. so that part was not done. He did a beautiful job otherwise, and very pleased with the outcome, so i did not want to rock the boat..although i made a comment that it was kind of high and he said that labor has increased these days in the contracting business...BTW, we are talking about NYC, if that should make a difference. I do not know what the going rates are for such a job. He spent 8 hours of work the final day and 4hrs or so the previous day for the removal of the Formica and put up the cement drywall. Would appreciate an honest opinion from other contractors who do such work...not another owner who may have used an unlicensed handyman, and obviously got it done for a lot less. This one was a licensed one. Thanks |
#2
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On Sun, 19 Jun 2011 12:19:14 -0700 (PDT), Anthony
wrote: Recently, I had a tile backsplash done in my kitchen. It required approx. 30 sq ft of coverage of 4 x 4'' tiles.. The guy had to remove my old Formica backsplash, and then installed cement drywall. In this process he also hard wired a new kitchen hood from an old outlet that was at the bottom base behind the range. Originally, he was going to make a hole in my cabinet above the stove so he can exhaust thru an opening he would have to make to the outside wall. He asked for $2000 for the job. I thought first that was kind of high, but thought well there is some labor in making that opening to the outside brick wall. IN the process, the purchased hood could only allow a 7" hole and he said its not possible because of the size of the cabinet and etc..he was planning on a 4'' hole at the max. so that part was not done. He did a beautiful job otherwise, and very pleased with the outcome, so i did not want to rock the boat..although i made a comment that it was kind of high and he said that labor has increased these days in the contracting business...BTW, we are talking about NYC, if that should make a difference. I do not know what the going rates are for such a job. He spent 8 hours of work the final day and 4hrs or so the previous day for the removal of the Formica and put up the cement drywall. Would appreciate an honest opinion from other contractors who do such work...not another owner who may have used an unlicensed handyman, and obviously got it done for a lot less. This one was a licensed one. Thanks Well, IF the man works for $65 per hour (that would sound reasonable for NYC), 12 hours of LABOUR is $780 - add to that the backer board, tile, adhesive, grout, wiring supplies etc, I'd say the price was , at the very least, fair. |
#3
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On Jun 19, 3:50*pm, wrote:
On Sun, 19 Jun 2011 12:19:14 -0700 (PDT), Anthony wrote: Recently, I had a tile backsplash done in my kitchen. It required approx. 30 sq ft of coverage of 4 x 4'' tiles.. The guy had to remove my old Formica backsplash, and then installed cement drywall. In this process he also hard wired a new kitchen hood from an old outlet that was at the bottom base behind the range. Originally, he was going to make a hole in my cabinet above the stove so he can exhaust thru an opening he would have to make to the outside wall. He asked for $2000 for the job. I thought first that was kind of high, but thought well there is some labor in making that opening to the outside brick wall. IN the process, the purchased hood could only allow a 7" hole and he said its not possible because of the size of the cabinet and etc..he was planning on a 4'' hole at the max. *so that part was not done. He did a beautiful job otherwise, and very pleased with the outcome, so i did not want to rock the boat..although i made a comment that it was kind of high and he said that labor has increased these days in the contracting business...BTW, we are talking about NYC, if that should make a difference. I do not know what the going rates are for such a job. He spent 8 hours of work the final day and 4hrs or so the previous day for the removal of the Formica and put up the cement drywall. Would appreciate an honest opinion from other contractors who do such work...not another owner who may have used an unlicensed handyman, and obviously got it done for a lot less. This one was a licensed one. Thanks * Well, IF the man works for $65 per hour (that would sound reasonable for NYC), 12 hours of LABOUR is $780 - add to that the backer board, tile, adhesive, grout, wiring supplies etc, I'd say the price was , at the very least, fair. Not sure if your saying that he bought the backer board,tile,adhesive, ( he did not use grout ) wiring supplies etc? I purchased all those items. to the tune of $1000 approx, which also included a $325 kitchen hood. |
#4
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On Sun, 19 Jun 2011 15:23:55 -0700 (PDT), Anthony
wrote: On Jun 19, 3:50Â*pm, wrote: On Sun, 19 Jun 2011 12:19:14 -0700 (PDT), Anthony wrote: Recently, I had a tile backsplash done in my kitchen. It required approx. 30 sq ft of coverage of 4 x 4'' tiles.. The guy had to remove my old Formica backsplash, and then installed cement drywall. In this process he also hard wired a new kitchen hood from an old outlet that was at the bottom base behind the range. Originally, he was going to make a hole in my cabinet above the stove so he can exhaust thru an opening he would have to make to the outside wall. He asked for $2000 for the job. I thought first that was kind of high, but thought well there is some labor in making that opening to the outside brick wall. IN the process, the purchased hood could only allow a 7" hole and he said its not possible because of the size of the cabinet and etc..he was planning on a 4'' hole at the max. Â*so that part was not done. He did a beautiful job otherwise, and very pleased with the outcome, so i did not want to rock the boat..although i made a comment that it was kind of high and he said that labor has increased these days in the contracting business...BTW, we are talking about NYC, if that should make a difference. I do not know what the going rates are for such a job. He spent 8 hours of work the final day and 4hrs or so the previous day for the removal of the Formica and put up the cement drywall. Would appreciate an honest opinion from other contractors who do such work...not another owner who may have used an unlicensed handyman, and obviously got it done for a lot less. This one was a licensed one. Thanks Â* Well, IF the man works for $65 per hour (that would sound reasonable for NYC), 12 hours of LABOUR is $780 - add to that the backer board, tile, adhesive, grout, wiring supplies etc, I'd say the price was , at the very least, fair. Not sure if your saying that he bought the backer board,tile,adhesive, ( he did not use grout ) wiring supplies etc? I purchased all those items. to the tune of $1000 approx, which also included a $325 kitchen hood. Then he must be charging more like $166 per hour - which is a bit over the top even for NYC, I would think. |
#5
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On 6/19/2011 3:19 PM, Anthony wrote:
Recently, I had a tile backsplash done in my kitchen. It required approx. 30 sq ft of coverage of 4 x 4'' tiles.. The guy had to remove my old Formica backsplash, and then installed cement drywall. In this process he also hard wired a new kitchen hood from an old outlet that was at the bottom base behind the range. Originally, he was going to make a hole in my cabinet above the stove so he can exhaust thru an opening he would have to make to the outside wall. He asked for $2000 for the job. I thought first that was kind of high, but thought well there is some labor in making that opening to the outside brick wall. IN the process, the purchased hood could only allow a 7" hole and he said its not possible because of the size of the cabinet and etc..he was planning on a 4'' hole at the max. so that part was not done. He did a beautiful job otherwise, and very pleased with the outcome, so i did not want to rock the boat..although i made a comment that it was kind of high and he said that labor has increased these days in the contracting business...BTW, we are talking about NYC, if that should make a difference. I do not know what the going rates are for such a job. He spent 8 hours of work the final day and 4hrs or so the previous day for the removal of the Formica and put up the cement drywall. Would appreciate an honest opinion from other contractors who do such work...not another owner who may have used an unlicensed handyman, and obviously got it done for a lot less. This one was a licensed one. Thanks Prices in the downstate NY area are going to be in the $100 per hr range. If he gave you a price that included work that ultimately wasn't done, his bill should be less than the quoted price. Unless there were other things done, that hadn't been included |
#6
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One aspect you didn't include in your figures is the time he spent,
away from your house, to think of the design and game plan of attack. One can't just show up and do a job with no plans specific to your house, though his forethought about the vent opening may have had to be altered. In remodeling, there are almost always unexpected issues, as the vent issue, that arise. I agree, that sounds like reasonably priced work. If the work is excellent, you might keep his number handy, for future work. It's not always easy to find a good craftsman/expert. Sonny |
#7
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![]() "Anthony" wrote He asked for $2000 for the job. I thought first that was kind of high, but thought well there is some labor in making that opening to the outside brick wall. IN the process, the purchased hood could only allow a 7" hole and he said its not possible because of the size of the cabinet and etc..he was planning on a 4'' hole at the max. so that part was not done. ...BTW, we are talking about NYC, if that should make a difference. Makes a huge difference. I do not know what the going rates are for such a job. He spent 8 hours of work the final day and 4hrs or so the previous day for the removal of the Formica and put up the cement drywall. 12 hours on the job correlates to about 16 hours total. Who paid for the dumping of the waste? It has been a while since I've done that kind of work, but at today's rates, I'd be about $1200 + material and expenses, such as dumping. This is outside of NY in a more rural setting. In the city, it is probably fair. Considering that he did not make the 7" hole, he should have knocked something off, unless he did some other extra work. |
#8
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I don't understand .If the range hood requires a 7" round duct, and he
put in only a 4" duct, it sounds as if he did something wrong. What kind of range hood do you have? And what are the specs of the hood? |
#9
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On Sun, 19 Jun 2011 19:20:15 -0700 (PDT), Mikepier
wrote: I don't understand .If the range hood requires a 7" round duct, and he put in only a 4" duct, it sounds as if he did something wrong. What kind of range hood do you have? And what are the specs of the hood? I'd supect it was a "convertible" hood and he installed it ventless. |
#10
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On Jun 19, 11:20*pm, wrote:
On Sun, 19 Jun 2011 19:20:15 -0700 (PDT), Mikepier wrote: I don't understand .If the range hood requires a 7" round duct, and he put in only a 4" duct, it sounds as if he did something wrong. What kind of range hood do you have? And what are the specs of the hood? *I'd supect it was a "convertible" hood and he installed it ventless. Sorry I misread the original post. The contractor never drilled a hole. |
#11
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On Jun 19, 10:11*pm, "Ed Pawlowski" wrote:
"Anthony" wrote *He asked for $2000 for the job. I thought first that was kind of high, but thought well there is some labor in making that opening to the outside brick wall. IN the process, the purchased hood could only allow a 7" hole and he said its not possible because of the size of the cabinet and etc..he was planning on a 4'' hole at the max. *so that part was not done. ...BTW, we are talking about NYC, if that should make a difference. Makes a huge difference. *I do not know what the going rates are for such a job. He spent 8 hours of work the final day and 4hrs or so the previous day for the removal of the Formica and put up the cement drywall. 12 hours on the job correlates to about 16 hours total. *Who paid for the dumping of the waste? *It has been a while since I've done that kind of work, but at today's rates, I'd be about $1200 + material and expenses, such as dumping. *This is outside of NY in a more rural setting. *In the city, it is probably fair. Considering that he did not make the 7" hole, he should have knocked something off, unless he did some other extra work. As for others who mentioned 16 hours total of work , in my math 8 and 4, equals 12. His labor was $2000, i spent $1000 for tiles, drywall, range hood, paste and all that goes with installing tiles in a 30sq.ft area with no grouting., total $3000. The hood is a Broan Allure QS2 series 36" in length...Paid for dumping? Isn't that part of the contract..? BTW, what waste are we talking about? The Formica was placed outside my home where the sanitation depart. picked it up..free, so he had no dumping to do...also, all those extra screws and bx cable and connectors that were left over, i gave to him...i had no personal use for them. |
#12
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On Jun 20, 8:50*am, Anthony wrote:
On Jun 19, 10:11*pm, "Ed Pawlowski" wrote: "Anthony" wrote *He asked for $2000 for the job. I thought first that was kind of high, but thought well there is some labor in making that opening to the outside brick wall. IN the process, the purchased hood could only allow a 7" hole and he said its not possible because of the size of the cabinet and etc..he was planning on a 4'' hole at the max. *so that part was not done. ...BTW, we are talking about NYC, if that should make a difference. Makes a huge difference. *I do not know what the going rates are for such a job. He spent 8 hours of work the final day and 4hrs or so the previous day for the removal of the Formica and put up the cement drywall. 12 hours on the job correlates to about 16 hours total. *Who paid for the dumping of the waste? *It has been a while since I've done that kind of work, but at today's rates, I'd be about $1200 + material and expenses, such as dumping. *This is outside of NY in a more rural setting. *In the city, it is probably fair. Considering that he did not make the 7" hole, he should have knocked something off, unless he did some other extra work. As for others who mentioned 16 hours total of work , in my math 8 and 4, equals 12. His labor was $2000, *i spent *$1000 for tiles, drywall, range hood, paste and all that goes with installing tiles in a 30sq.ft area with no grouting., total $3000. The hood is a Broan Allure QS2 series *36" in length...Paid for dumping? Isn't that part of the contract..? BTW, what waste are we talking about? The Formica was placed outside my home where the sanitation depart. picked it up..free, so he had no dumping to do...also, all those extra screws and bx cable and connectors that were left over, i gave to him...i had no personal use for them.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Did he give you a $2k quote to start with? I'm guessing he installed the hood but configured it for recirculation instead of venting outside? If he gave you a $2k quote and that included making a hole in the exterior wall then he probably should knock a little off. But I wouldn't expect much, a couple hundred dollars maybe. You don't make it clear if he gave you an estimate up front? |
#13
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![]() "Anthony" wrote in message ... On Jun 19, 10:11 pm, "Ed Pawlowski" wrote: "Anthony" wrote He asked for $2000 for the job. I thought first that was kind of high, but thought well there is some labor in making that opening to the outside brick wall. IN the process, the purchased hood could only allow a 7" hole and he said its not possible because of the size of the cabinet and etc..he was planning on a 4'' hole at the max. so that part was not done. ...BTW, we are talking about NYC, if that should make a difference. Makes a huge difference. I do not know what the going rates are for such a job. He spent 8 hours of work the final day and 4hrs or so the previous day for the removal of the Formica and put up the cement drywall. 12 hours on the job correlates to about 16 hours total. Who paid for the dumping of the waste? It has been a while since I've done that kind of work, but at today's rates, I'd be about $1200 + material and expenses, such as dumping. This is outside of NY in a more rural setting. In the city, it is probably fair. Considering that he did not make the 7" hole, he should have knocked something off, unless he did some other extra work. As for others who mentioned 16 hours total of work , in my math 8 and 4, equals 12. You missed the point. 12 hrs _on the job_ correlates to 16 hrs, and I think that's a bit on the low side. Surely he spent at least 2 hrs per day travel time & getting the appropriate tools in order. |
#14
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On Jun 20, 9:13*am, "Nanez" wrote:
"Anthony" wrote in message On Jun 19, 10:11 pm, "Ed Pawlowski" wrote: "Anthony" wrote He asked for $2000 for the job. I thought first that was kind of high, but thought well there is some labor in making that opening to the outside brick wall. IN the process, the purchased hood could only allow a 7" hole and he said its not possible because of the size of the cabinet and etc..he was planning on a 4'' hole at the max. so that part was not done. ...BTW, we are talking about NYC, if that should make a difference. Makes a huge difference. I do not know what the going rates are for such a job. He spent 8 hours of work the final day and 4hrs or so the previous day for the removal of the Formica and put up the cement drywall. 12 hours on the job correlates to about 16 hours total. Who paid for the dumping of the waste? It has been a while since I've done that kind of work, but at today's rates, I'd be about $1200 + material and expenses, such as dumping. This is outside of NY in a more rural setting. In the city, it is probably fair. Considering that he did not make the 7" hole, he should have knocked something off, unless he did some other extra work. As for others who mentioned 16 hours total of work , in my math 8 and 4, equals 12. You missed the point. 12 hrs _on the job_ correlates to 16 hrs, and I think that's a bit on the low side. Surely he spent at least 2 hrs per day travel time & getting the appropriate tools in order. The hours spent are irrelevant. The OP did not ask about a time and materials accounting. He's trying to reverse engineer the pricing of lump sum work after it's done. The work got done - beautifully - so it's extremely unlikely that the contractor broke in and did the work while the OP was away. The OP agreed to the price that he thought was a little bit high, and now that the work is done, he's trying to squeeze the contractor. I am not convinced that the OP has enough wherewithal in the home improvement experience bank to make a determination of what constitutes 'beautiful' work, but that's another issue. As far as NYC pricing, I had a buddy that had a wood closet door installed in an existing metal jamb, and he provided the hardware. The contractor picked up a used door and installed it in a morning and charged $900. He paid it, and I think he was nuts, but people charge what they can get. The OP's post starts off with a misleading subject line - "Was I overcharged?" No. No he wasn't overcharged. There's no set price for what was done. The OP got a number from a contractor, gave the go ahead (admittedly with some reservations), and the work was done beautifully. What's his beef? That the contractor didn't stretch it out to three or four days to make it seem like he was getting his money's worth? Sheesh. If the OP wants a Buyer's Protection policy, he should try eBay. R |
#15
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![]() "RicodJour" wrote in message ... The OP's post starts off with a misleading subject line - "Was I overcharged?" No. No he wasn't overcharged. There's no set price for what was done. The OP got a number from a contractor, gave the go ahead (admittedly with some reservations), and the work was done beautifully. What's his beef? That the contractor didn't stretch it out to three or four days to make it seem like he was getting his money's worth? Sheesh. If the OP wants a Buyer's Protection policy, he should try eBay. You're absolutely correct. |
#16
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In article , Nanez wrote:
...snipped... You missed the point. 12 hrs _on the job_ correlates to 16 hrs, and I think that's a bit on the low side. Surely he spent at least 2 hrs per day travel time & getting the appropriate tools in order. It may be customary in some areas for some contractors to charge labor time for travel hours, and if they don't do so explicitly, they will build that cost into their overall pricing. On the other hand, most workers don't get paid for their commuting time and I think this is the perspective most consumers have. -- Better to be stuck up in a tree than tied to one. Larry Wasserman - Baltimore Maryland - lwasserm(a)sdf. lonestar.org |
#17
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Anthony wrote:
.... As for others who mentioned 16 hours total of work , in my math 8 and 4, equals 12. His labor was $2000, ... You don't break the charges down but the 12 hours was at your site doesn't include his travel and other overhead charges--around here, even plumbers charge hourly for the truck sitting in the driveway any more. I've no idea what even base labor rates would be in NYC, but for a skilled craftsman anywhere from $100-150/hr or so fully burdened doesn't surprise me at all. -- |
#18
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On 6/19/2011 3:19 PM, Anthony wrote:
Recently, I had a tile backsplash done in my kitchen. It required approx. 30 sq ft of coverage of 4 x 4'' tiles.. The guy had to remove my old Formica backsplash, and then installed cement drywall. In this process he also hard wired a new kitchen hood from an old outlet that was at the bottom base behind the range. Originally, he was going to make a hole in my cabinet above the stove so he can exhaust thru an opening he would have to make to the outside wall. He asked for $2000 for the job. I thought first that was kind of high, but thought well there is some labor in making that opening to the outside brick wall. IN the process, the purchased hood could only allow a 7" hole and he said its not possible because of the size of the cabinet and etc..he was planning on a 4'' hole at the max. so that part was not done. He did a beautiful job otherwise, and very pleased with the outcome, so i did not want to rock the boat..although i made a comment that it was kind of high and he said that labor has increased these days in the contracting business...BTW, we are talking about NYC, if that should make a difference. I do not know what the going rates are for such a job. He spent 8 hours of work the final day and 4hrs or so the previous day for the removal of the Formica and put up the cement drywall. Would appreciate an honest opinion from other contractors who do such work...not another owner who may have used an unlicensed handyman, and obviously got it done for a lot less. This one was a licensed one. Thanks Couple of things to consider: One would be the considerable amount of work cutting a 7" hole in the brick and running the ducting. I do kitchens all the time, and I've never seen a 4" duct on a range hood. Second, and not a biggy. He installed the wiring from an outlet behind the range for the hood. The outlet behind the range can be tapped from the counter outlet circuit, as per Nec, however the range hood cannot. NYC also requires someone with an electrical license to do this work. |
#19
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On Jun 20, 7:29*am, RBM wrote:
On 6/19/2011 3:19 PM, Anthony wrote: Recently, I had a tile backsplash done in my kitchen. It required approx. 30 sq ft of coverage of 4 x 4'' tiles.. The guy had to remove my old Formica backsplash, and then installed cement drywall. In this process he also hard wired a new kitchen hood from an old outlet that was at the bottom base behind the range. Originally, he was going to make a hole in my cabinet above the stove so he can exhaust thru an opening he would have to make to the outside wall. He asked for $2000 for the job. I thought first that was kind of high, but thought well there is some labor in making that opening to the outside brick wall. IN the process, the purchased hood could only allow a 7" hole and he said its not possible because of the size of the cabinet and etc..he was planning on a 4'' hole at the max. *so that part was not done. He did a beautiful job otherwise, and very pleased with the outcome, so i did not want to rock the boat..although i made a comment that it was kind of high and he said that labor has increased these days in the contracting business...BTW, we are talking about NYC, if that should make a difference. I do not know what the going rates are for such a job. He spent 8 hours of work the final day and 4hrs or so the previous day for the removal of the Formica and put up the cement drywall. Would appreciate an honest opinion from other contractors who do such work...not another owner who may have used an unlicensed handyman, and obviously got it done for a lot less. This one was a licensed one. Thanks Couple of things to consider: One would be the considerable amount of work cutting a 7" hole in the brick and running the ducting. I do kitchens all the time, and I've never seen a 4" duct on a range hood. Second, and not a biggy. He installed the wiring from an outlet behind the range for the hood. The outlet behind the range can be tapped from the counter outlet circuit, as per Nec, however the range hood cannot. NYC also requires someone with an electrical license to do this work. The outlet behind the range can be tapped from the counter outlet circuit, as per Nec, however the range hood cannot. NYC also requires someone with an electrical license to do this work. HI, could u explain in detail of your comment?...per NEC? As for the wiring, it was hard wired from an existing outlet via bx cable to my new Hood ....and he is a licensed contractor, so wouldn't that cover the electrical issue? |
#20
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On Jun 20, 8:41*am, Anthony wrote:
On Jun 20, 7:29*am, RBM wrote: On 6/19/2011 3:19 PM, Anthony wrote: Recently, I had a tile backsplash done in my kitchen. It required approx. 30 sq ft of coverage of 4 x 4'' tiles.. The guy had to remove my old Formica backsplash, and then installed cement drywall. In this process he also hard wired a new kitchen hood from an old outlet that was at the bottom base behind the range. Originally, he was going to make a hole in my cabinet above the stove so he can exhaust thru an opening he would have to make to the outside wall. He asked for $2000 for the job. I thought first that was kind of high, but thought well there is some labor in making that opening to the outside brick wall. IN the process, the purchased hood could only allow a 7" hole and he said its not possible because of the size of the cabinet and etc..he was planning on a 4'' hole at the max. *so that part was not done. He did a beautiful job otherwise, and very pleased with the outcome, so i did not want to rock the boat..although i made a comment that it was kind of high and he said that labor has increased these days in the contracting business...BTW, we are talking about NYC, if that should make a difference. I do not know what the going rates are for such a job. He spent 8 hours of work the final day and 4hrs or so the previous day for the removal of the Formica and put up the cement drywall. Would appreciate an honest opinion from other contractors who do such work...not another owner who may have used an unlicensed handyman, and obviously got it done for a lot less. This one was a licensed one. Thanks Couple of things to consider: One would be the considerable amount of work cutting a 7" hole in the brick and running the ducting. I do kitchens all the time, and I've never seen a 4" duct on a range hood. Second, and not a biggy. He installed the wiring from an outlet behind the range for the hood. The outlet behind the range can be tapped from the counter outlet circuit, as per Nec, however the range hood cannot. NYC also requires someone with an electrical license to do this work. The outlet behind the range can be tapped from the counter outlet circuit, as per Nec, however the range hood cannot. NYC also requires someone with an electrical license to do this work. The OP said his guy tapped off of the outlet that was already behind the range. Your statement above seems to be referring to tapping off of a countertop outlet. Please clarify what you wrote and what is allowed/prohibited so there's no misunderstanding. HI, could u explain in detail of your comment?...per NEC? *As for the wiring, it was hard wired from an existing outlet via bx cable to my new Hood ....and he is a licensed contractor, so wouldn't that cover the electrical issue? Not unless he is a licensed electrician. Different license from whatever NYC requires for home improvement. Reading your stance from here in the cheap seats, you're having buyer's remorse and looking for a way to knock down the price after the fact. You agreed to the price, you said the guy did beautiful work, but now you want to squeeze him after it's done. There's a word for that - "schmuck". Maybe you know it. The guy gave you a lump sum, not a time and materials quote, so it is irrelevant how many hours he spent doing the work. You could have said no to the guy's number up front - nobody held a gun to your head. If he didn't do some work, then the number needs to be adjusted, but going on a fishing expedition to find other ways that you can beat up on the guy, and asking for help on how to do it, is a weaselly way to go. R |
#21
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On Jun 20, 8:58*am, RicodJour wrote:
On Jun 20, 8:41*am, Anthony wrote: On Jun 20, 7:29*am, RBM wrote: On 6/19/2011 3:19 PM, Anthony wrote: Recently, I had a tile backsplash done in my kitchen. It required approx. 30 sq ft of coverage of 4 x 4'' tiles.. The guy had to remove my old Formica backsplash, and then installed cement drywall. In this process he also hard wired a new kitchen hood from an old outlet that was at the bottom base behind the range. Originally, he was going to make a hole in my cabinet above the stove so he can exhaust thru an opening he would have to make to the outside wall. He asked for $2000 for the job. I thought first that was kind of high, but thought well there is some labor in making that opening to the outside brick wall. IN the process, the purchased hood could only allow a 7" hole and he said its not possible because of the size of the cabinet and etc..he was planning on a 4'' hole at the max. *so that part was not done.. He did a beautiful job otherwise, and very pleased with the outcome, so i did not want to rock the boat..although i made a comment that it was kind of high and he said that labor has increased these days in the contracting business...BTW, we are talking about NYC, if that should make a difference. I do not know what the going rates are for such a job. He spent 8 hours of work the final day and 4hrs or so the previous day for the removal of the Formica and put up the cement drywall. Would appreciate an honest opinion from other contractors who do such work...not another owner who may have used an unlicensed handyman, and obviously got it done for a lot less. This one was a licensed one. Thanks Couple of things to consider: One would be the considerable amount of work cutting a 7" hole in the brick and running the ducting. I do kitchens all the time, and I've never seen a 4" duct on a range hood. Second, and not a biggy. He installed the wiring from an outlet behind the range for the hood. The outlet behind the range can be tapped from the counter outlet circuit, as per Nec, however the range hood cannot.. NYC also requires someone with an electrical license to do this work. The outlet behind the range can be tapped from the counter outlet circuit, as per Nec, however the range hood cannot. NYC also requires someone with an electrical license to do this work. The OP said his guy tapped off of the outlet that was already behind the range. *Your statement above seems to be referring to tapping off of a countertop outlet. *Please clarify what you wrote and what is allowed/prohibited so there's no misunderstanding. HI, could u explain in detail of your comment?...per NEC? *As for the wiring, it was hard wired from an existing outlet via bx cable to my new Hood ....and he is a licensed contractor, so wouldn't that cover the electrical issue? Not unless he is a licensed electrician. *Different license from whatever NYC requires for home improvement. Reading your stance from here in the cheap seats, you're having buyer's remorse and looking for a way to knock down the price after the fact. *You agreed to the price, you said the guy did beautiful work, but now you want to squeeze him after it's done. *There's a word for that - "schmuck". *Maybe you know it. *The guy gave you a lump sum, not a time and materials quote, so it is irrelevant how many hours he spent doing the work. *You could have said no to the guy's number up front - nobody held a gun to your head. *If he didn't do some work, then the number needs to be adjusted, but going on a fishing expedition to find other ways that you can beat up on the guy, and asking for help on how to do it, is a weaselly way to go. R I am merely asking as a uneducated consumer in this field. I am not trying to squeeze him. Its done and over,but i was considering him for another job i need to be done and just wanted to know if those were typical rates. The overcharge statement was only related to the part of not doing that hole he said he would do into my cabinets, and then to the outside wall, which was never done. The $2000 charge included that part of the work and obviously, the more intense work, that was why he was charging me that amount. I merely thought that he would have said " i know i was suppose to do this hole bit and included in the price...but not being able to do so, i would lower my fee." |
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Anthony wrote:
.... I am merely asking as a uneducated consumer in this field. I am not trying to squeeze him. Its done and over,but i was considering him for another job i need to be done and just wanted to know if those were typical rates. The overcharge statement was only related to the part of not doing that hole he said he would do into my cabinets, and then to the outside wall, which was never done. The $2000 charge included that part of the work and obviously, the more intense work, that was why he was charging me that amount. I merely thought that he would have said " i know i was suppose to do this hole bit and included in the price...but not being able to do so, i would lower my fee." Was going to add above that while I don't think the hourly rate is terribly out of line for NYC, that's on basis of small jobs that are more costly to the workman than are larger projects; I'd expect the hourly rate to be significantly lower for a job that was a month, say. I'd presume this actually was done as a fixed price bid and as such would not be terribly surprised he didn't drop the bill for a small task, particularly because he probably ran into at least some complication elsewhere during the job; nothing goes entirely as planned in old work. Also, I'd expect the effort he planned for the original hole _probably_ wasn't as big an effort as you may think; typically homeowners/diy'ers way overestimate the actual work in making structural changes. For example, they'll go to all kinds of extremes to avoid cutting a hole in sheetrock when it wouldn't take a tenth of the total time to simply make the hole and repair the wall/ceiling the way a pro would approach it. Similarly, the concept/effort of knocking a hole thru a brick wall probably wasn't any different to this guy than would have been to just cut a hole through a frame siding. A hammer and chisel and a few blows and you gots a hole... ![]() -- |
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"Anthony" wrote in message
news:35e7d35b-8280-4ca5-9f10-stuff snipped I am merely asking as a uneducated consumer in this field. I am not trying to squeeze him. Its done and over,but i was considering him for another job i need to be done and just wanted to know if those were typical rates. The overcharge statement was only related to the part of not doing that hole he said he would do into my cabinets, and then to the outside wall, which was never done. The $2000 charge included that part of the work and obviously, the more intense work, that was why he was charging me that amount. I merely thought that he would have said " i know i was suppose to do this hole bit and included in the price...but not being able to do so, i would lower my fee." And he was probably surprised you took his first offer. The bottom line here is simple contract law. You had a contract to perform certain work, part of which was not performed. When you have no contract the theory of "quantum meruit" might apply, http://dictionary.law.com/Default.aspx?selected=1692 But you *have* a contract (I assume) and if you sued, a judge would be likely to rebate the portion of your payment that could be attributed to the work not performed. The problem is, suing is very likely to be a wash. What you gained would be eaten up in costs. I'd just approach him and say just what I've said. You agreed to pay for something that wasn't done. That means a refund of some sort is in order. If it were to go to court, you'd probably have to get a separate quote just for the work that wasn't performed so the judge would have some idea what the unperformed work is worth. I think you made an error by not bargaining right from square one - saying $2000 is more than I expected (or was much higher than my other two quotes - which you should have gotten) and offering something lower. Carleton Sheets, the real estate mogul said his fortune was based on offering outrageously low prices on houses that buyers, to his surpise, ended up taking. He said other potential buyers were worried about how the seller would perceive them if they lowballed an offer so they didn't and just moved on. Contractors often aim quite high and are surprised there's no haggling. I once quote an hourly rate to a law firm that I thought was outrageously high. A junior associate told me "they were willing to pay twice that!" So I never again lowballed my own worth and regularly lowballed everyone else's. It's just the capitalistic way. By cheap, sell dear. Once you've established you're too polite to haggle, don't expect your contractor to offer a rebate without you asking for one. In legal terms, you're entitled to money back, as I understand your contract, because you paid for work not performed. At this stage I would simply say, listen, I paid what you asked but you didn't do what you promised you would. I would appreciate an adjustment in the final price, especially since I've discovered the electrical hookup may be illegal and may have to be redone by an electrician to meet code requirements, a situation that could affect his license if it is indeed against code to pull a wire from an outlet box to the hood. FWIW, recirculating fans are not worth much compared to an outside exhaust, at least IMHO, a conclusion you could come to on your own quite soon. -- Bobby G. |
#24
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On Jun 20, 10:14*am, Anthony wrote:
I am merely asking as a uneducated consumer in this field. I am not trying to squeeze him. Its done and over,but i was considering him for another job i need *to be *done and just wanted to know if those were typical rates. The overcharge statement was only related to the part of not doing that hole he said he would do into my cabinets, and then to the outside wall, which was never done. The $2000 charge included that part of the work and obviously, the more intense work, that was why he was charging me that amount. *I merely thought that he would have said " i know i was suppose to do this hole bit and included in the price...but not being able to do so, i would lower my fee." If he didn't do something that was included in the original quote, you shouldn't pay him for that. You should have negotiated how much the left out part was worth, and deducted it. A hole in brick on the first floor over a driveway is a bit, a hole in brick on the third floor over a sidewalk is a much bigger bit. His idea of what it's worth will vary from yours, and you try to meet somewhere in the middle so both people are right at the mildly happy/unhappy line. When you say done and over it is still not clear whether you already paid him. If so, then that was your mistake - not what the guy originally quoted you...but that was also a mistake in that you thought it was high and let it slide. The time to negotiate a change in price is always as soon as possible. The time to question a If you leave it to the end, he's already mentally spending the money and it'll be harder. If there are costs or savings that are not yet determined |
#25
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On 6/20/2011 8:58 AM, RicodJour wrote:
On Jun 20, 8:41 am, wrote: On Jun 20, 7:29 am, wrote: On 6/19/2011 3:19 PM, Anthony wrote: Recently, I had a tile backsplash done in my kitchen. It required approx. 30 sq ft of coverage of 4 x 4'' tiles.. The guy had to remove my old Formica backsplash, and then installed cement drywall. In this process he also hard wired a new kitchen hood from an old outlet that was at the bottom base behind the range. Originally, he was going to make a hole in my cabinet above the stove so he can exhaust thru an opening he would have to make to the outside wall. He asked for $2000 for the job. I thought first that was kind of high, but thought well there is some labor in making that opening to the outside brick wall. IN the process, the purchased hood could only allow a 7" hole and he said its not possible because of the size of the cabinet and etc..he was planning on a 4'' hole at the max. so that part was not done. He did a beautiful job otherwise, and very pleased with the outcome, so i did not want to rock the boat..although i made a comment that it was kind of high and he said that labor has increased these days in the contracting business...BTW, we are talking about NYC, if that should make a difference. I do not know what the going rates are for such a job. He spent 8 hours of work the final day and 4hrs or so the previous day for the removal of the Formica and put up the cement drywall. Would appreciate an honest opinion from other contractors who do such work...not another owner who may have used an unlicensed handyman, and obviously got it done for a lot less. This one was a licensed one. Thanks Couple of things to consider: One would be the considerable amount of work cutting a 7" hole in the brick and running the ducting. I do kitchens all the time, and I've never seen a 4" duct on a range hood. Second, and not a biggy. He installed the wiring from an outlet behind the range for the hood. The outlet behind the range can be tapped from the counter outlet circuit, as per Nec, however the range hood cannot. NYC also requires someone with an electrical license to do this work. The outlet behind the range can be tapped from the counter outlet circuit, as per Nec, however the range hood cannot. NYC also requires someone with an electrical license to do this work. The OP said his guy tapped off of the outlet that was already behind the range. Your statement above seems to be referring to tapping off of a countertop outlet. Please clarify what you wrote and what is allowed/prohibited so there's no misunderstanding. HI, could u explain in detail of your comment?...per NEC? As for the wiring, it was hard wired from an existing outlet via bx cable to my new Hood ....and he is a licensed contractor, so wouldn't that cover the electrical issue? Not unless he is a licensed electrician. Different license from whatever NYC requires for home improvement. Reading your stance from here in the cheap seats, you're having buyer's remorse and looking for a way to knock down the price after the fact. You agreed to the price, you said the guy did beautiful work, but now you want to squeeze him after it's done. There's a word for that - "schmuck". Maybe you know it. The guy gave you a lump sum, not a time and materials quote, so it is irrelevant how many hours he spent doing the work. You could have said no to the guy's number up front - nobody held a gun to your head. If he didn't do some work, then the number needs to be adjusted, but going on a fishing expedition to find other ways that you can beat up on the guy, and asking for help on how to do it, is a weaselly way to go. R I don't have any problem with the guy's quoted price, just that it included this 7" hole in brick, and running duct work, which was never done. I also question his competence if he intended to run a 4" duct for a kitchen range hood. The electrical stuff is imo a fairly minor issue, but as you point out, NYC requires an "electrical" license, not a contractor's license. |
#26
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![]() "Anthony" wrote in message ... .. and he is a licensed contractor, so wouldn't that cover the electrical issue? An electrical license must be held. I know of no place where a GC (general contractor) can do electrical work, without an electrical license. Usually, a GC subcontracts electrical work out to a _licensed electrician_. When I was a GC, my insurance would not have covered any electrical work performed for electrical. |
#27
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On Jun 20, 9:17*am, "Nanez" wrote:
"Anthony" wrote in message and he is a licensed contractor, so wouldn't that cover the electrical issue? An electrical license must be held. I know of no place where a GC (general contractor) can do electrical work, without an electrical license. Usually, a GC subcontracts electrical work out to a _licensed electrician_. *When I was a GC, my insurance would not have covered any electrical work performed for electrical. Yes, that is absolutely true. I am not fond of electrical. I've done a small amount myself, but my skills lie in other areas, so I use the same couple or three electricians that I've been using for 25 years. In the "real" world, handymen do electrical work all of the time, and, yes, they are not supposed to do it. To hazard a conservative guess, I'd say that at least half of the handyman out there would have absolutely no qualms about adding an outlet or wiring a ceiling fan. In the OP's situation, if the contractor had hired an electrician, how much do you think would have been tacked on to the $2000 bill? I'd guess three hundred as an absolute minimum, and an extra day (or week?) added to the schedule until the electrician finally gets around to taking care of the huge single outlet retirement project. ![]() R |
#28
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On Jun 20, 9:37*am, RicodJour wrote:
On Jun 20, 9:17*am, "Nanez" wrote: "Anthony" wrote in message and he is a licensed contractor, so wouldn't that cover the electrical issue? An electrical license must be held. I know of no place where a GC (general contractor) can do electrical work, without an electrical license. Usually, In the OP's situation, if the contractor had hired an electrician, how much do you think would have been tacked on to the $2000 bill? *I'd guess three hundred as an absolute minimum, and an extra day (or week?) added to the schedule until the electrician finally gets around to taking care of the huge single outlet retirement project. * ![]() R Well, that $2000 labor included the electrical connection cause i asked him to do it. He did use bx cable which i believe was the right way of doing it. A handy man might of done it too, but without a bx cable. |
#29
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On Jun 20, 9:17*am, "Nanez" wrote:
"Anthony" wrote in message and he is a licensed contractor, so wouldn't that cover the electrical issue? An electrical license must be held. I know of no place where a GC (general contractor) can do electrical work, without an electrical license. Usually, a GC subcontracts electrical work out to a _licensed electrician_. *When I was a GC, my insurance would not have covered any electrical work performed for electrical. It's interesting that the OP is gathering more ammunition for his War of the Weasels, when he's not above ****ing around with electrical stuff himself, when he doesn't know his ass from his elbow and shouldn't be mucking about with a screwdriver. Here's a post of his from a while back - he's a nym shifter - Boothbay. http://groups.google.com/group/alt.h...22de2972c989d# R |
#30
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On 6/20/2011 8:41 AM, Anthony wrote:
On Jun 20, 7:29 am, wrote: On 6/19/2011 3:19 PM, Anthony wrote: Recently, I had a tile backsplash done in my kitchen. It required approx. 30 sq ft of coverage of 4 x 4'' tiles.. The guy had to remove my old Formica backsplash, and then installed cement drywall. In this process he also hard wired a new kitchen hood from an old outlet that was at the bottom base behind the range. Originally, he was going to make a hole in my cabinet above the stove so he can exhaust thru an opening he would have to make to the outside wall. He asked for $2000 for the job. I thought first that was kind of high, but thought well there is some labor in making that opening to the outside brick wall. IN the process, the purchased hood could only allow a 7" hole and he said its not possible because of the size of the cabinet and etc..he was planning on a 4'' hole at the max. so that part was not done. He did a beautiful job otherwise, and very pleased with the outcome, so i did not want to rock the boat..although i made a comment that it was kind of high and he said that labor has increased these days in the contracting business...BTW, we are talking about NYC, if that should make a difference. I do not know what the going rates are for such a job. He spent 8 hours of work the final day and 4hrs or so the previous day for the removal of the Formica and put up the cement drywall. Would appreciate an honest opinion from other contractors who do such work...not another owner who may have used an unlicensed handyman, and obviously got it done for a lot less. This one was a licensed one. Thanks Couple of things to consider: One would be the considerable amount of work cutting a 7" hole in the brick and running the ducting. I do kitchens all the time, and I've never seen a 4" duct on a range hood. Second, and not a biggy. He installed the wiring from an outlet behind the range for the hood. The outlet behind the range can be tapped from the counter outlet circuit, as per Nec, however the range hood cannot. NYC also requires someone with an electrical license to do this work. The outlet behind the range can be tapped from the counter outlet circuit, as per Nec, however the range hood cannot. NYC also requires someone with an electrical license to do this work. HI, could u explain in detail of your comment?...per NEC? As for the wiring, it was hard wired from an existing outlet via bx cable to my new Hood ....and he is a licensed contractor, so wouldn't that cover the electrical issue? Like I said, it's not a big deal, but the electrical code doesn't allow tapping that outlet to feed a range hood |
#31
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RBM wrote:
.... Like I said, it's not a big deal, but the electrical code doesn't allow tapping that outlet to feed a range hood Yeah, and that's one of those places where assuming the circuit isn't otherwise overloaded and the fan isn't a 3hp industrial unit NEC seems perhaps overly conservative in existing work in a cost/benefit ratio. A typical home range hood isn't much different than the mixer motor/light that would be plugged into the outlet, anyway. New work, sure. Old work that doesn't require a much effort to run, ok. Old work that's more typical I agree w/ the "it's not a big deal" assessment (w/ the previous caveats). But, of course, it isn't in Code so I didn't say any of the above... ![]() -- |
#32
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"dpb" wrote in message ...
RBM wrote: ... Like I said, it's not a big deal, but the electrical code doesn't allow tapping that outlet to feed a range hood Yeah, and that's one of those places where assuming the circuit isn't otherwise overloaded and the fan isn't a 3hp industrial unit NEC seems perhaps overly conservative in existing work in a cost/benefit ratio. A typical home range hood isn't much different than the mixer motor/light that would be plugged into the outlet, anyway. New work, sure. Old work that doesn't require a much effort to run, ok. Old work that's more typical I agree w/ the "it's not a big deal" assessment (w/ the previous caveats). But, of course, it isn't in Code so I didn't say any of the above... ![]() Yes, and if it isn't code, it isn't done in what courts call a "workmanlike matter" and leaves the contractor vulnerable to Anthony hiring someone else to make it code and the courts making him the original contractor pay for it. Could even cost him his license to do tile work if exceeded the bounds of his license. -- Bobby G. |
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