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Gas / Kitchen fitters


CheatingRabbit
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Carp!

 

When we go in and carry out work, we are then required to ensure it's gas tight, to do that we would generally test the complete installation. If there is a leak we are duty bound to make it safe, if the pipe, meter or fittings don't comply or aren't sound, we are duty bound to ensure it is made safe...if that means waiting on site for an hour or more for the gas transporters engineer to turn up, then we do it etc, etc. When we fit a gas appliance we are duty bound to check it's safe to use, IF anything isn't and an accident results, guess who the HSE will come after first!

you would cap the meter of ,cause the client would not pay a fortune for the fix lol
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you would cap the meter of ,cause the client would not pay a fortune for the fix lol

That all depends on the situation, a seized ECV (control valve) means that you can't cap anything because you can't turn the gas off. Would I cap a meter with a newborn baby and mum in the house in Winter? Not if it can be helped in any way.

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The cooker in question was off site. (And is covered by a fairly recent safety certificate 8 months or so)

but the rest of the system was tested at the meter as normal before and after the checks and work.

So there was no appliance for him to fit.

He may not have any for the cooker,but he's tested the carcass and meter so now has some responsibility as to it's condition.

funny that that happened to me ten years back

What did?

Edited by -Mongrel-
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Gosh

 

Can of worms well and truly opened here....

 

Sorry for that. I'll get a new hob and find a registered fitter to change the bayonet fitting.

 

less than £100 is no price to pay for peace of mind, and I'd advise anyone in the same spot to consider that!

 

Cheers all

 

CR

don't worry mate glad you got it sorted

merry christmas

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Gosh

 

Can of worms well and truly opened here....

 

Sorry for that. I'll get a new hob and find a registered fitter to change the bayonet fitting.

 

less than £100 is no price to pay for peace of mind, and I'd advise anyone in the same spot to consider that!

 

Cheers all

 

CR

Ha ha just a friendly debate.

 

Happy Christmas pal :)

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gas got capped of with a new born in the house , asked him to fix the problem he didn't have time was the answer , had the cap back out before he left the the drive and fixed the leak with in 30 mins

If it was just a case of being pushed for time, the bloke was a berk, and yes that is my professional opinion. Ours is a service industry, you need to give good service.

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The new hob will need to be fitted with a ridged connection you cannot re fit it to the flexi!! So £80 is a good price and sounds about right to me! And I'm a gas/heating engineer so not talking from a DIY background

 

 

The only thing the gas regs say about you doing your own gas work is that " any person working with gas must be a competant person"

The rest of the regs are concerned solely with employers and employees and there is no definition within the regs of the word competent , so if your competent than you can do your own gas work legally and lawfully as you would be neither an employer or employee

been competent means you know the regs and fit it to the current standard which I'm sure unless you have done your gas safe you won't know!!

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The only thing the gas regs say about you doing your own gas work is that " any person working with gas must be a competant person"

The rest of the regs are concerned solely with employers and employees and there is no definition within the regs of the word competent , so if your competent than you can do your own gas work legally and lawfully as you would be neither an employer or employee

 

 

The new hob will need to be fitted with a ridged connection you cannot re fit it to the flexi!! So £80 is a good price and sounds about right to me! And I'm a gas/heating engineer so not talking from a DIY background

 

 

 

been competent means you know the regs and fit it to the current standard which I'm sure unless you have done your gas safe you won't know!!

 

It's not a gas hob, it turns out it was a cooker so is on a flexi. Our man is also correct in regard to working on YOUR OWN gas, the regs only state you must be competent...

 

That said, I defy anybody who isn't gas qualified to carry out gas work, to the letter of the regulations, on their own installation.

 

Quick one for the DIY'ers out there. How many of you, who would be prepared to work on your own gas supply, own a temporary continuity bond, or even know what one is?

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can't beleive this thread rolls on, i don't go looking for this sort of work work as i'm generally to busy with other things. but really i can't see what would be so technical or worthy of £80 for this job. whether fitting a replacement backplate elbow and fitting or even fitting a hob if the worktop is cut and the hob is ready to fit pipe it up solder it and tightness test and purge 30 mins in and out £50 inc vat i would say.[ invoice and documentation supplied]

sure you charge more down south but up here thats the going rate same as a callout.

i will also add i am gas safe, oftec and have liability insurance, running my own business,van etc etc, with costs to cover

there's nothing too special about being gas safe registered imo. back in the day when i was a tractor driver my pa1/2 pesticide cert was more difficult than the current ccn1 gas assesment you just have to look at the numpties passing it nowadays.

certainly get the job done right but don't have your pants pulled down.

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