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L

LCV

Hi,

As part of a full house renovation the house was completely rewired. I asked the Electrician to fit the plug sockets in the home office at a high level so that the printers sitting on the cabinets can easily be plugged into them. The plug sockets would be concealed by the printers.

I did not specify the height to the Electrician and neither did he ask me. He has finished doing the 2nd fix and I've now noticed that he has positioned the sockets to be the same height as the light switches which of course is far too high and looks really silly. The plug sockets are about 30cm higher than it needs to be.

What is your view on this?

Thanks.
 
I am on site often. The room is completely empty and the wall doesn't have anything else on it apart from these two plug sockets so looking at the wall I didn't notice that something was wrong because there isn't anything to gauge the height with. I just assumed he put them in at the standard height for desktop equipment.

Is there a standard or recommended height of where plug sockets should be located for desktop equipment?
 
As qualified Electricians, would you ever position plug sockets specifically for desktop equipment 55cm higher than the equipment? He has made a judgement call and did it this way but I am wondering how many people would actually do it like this.
 
The home office is in the living room so it is on display. The current height means I will have a 30cm cord trailing down to each printer that sit on the desk level cabinets. I am having wall units above the desk level cabinets so they can not stay in this position.

yes I agree that he is not a mind reader but he could have asked me. I am only a phone call away. He knew the sockets were for home office equipment as I gave him plans that showed him the location of all the furniture.

and you didn't think to mark the positions and heights of the sockets on the drawing???

I have a home office as well with 2 printers & a Fax machine in it. These are on a shelf which is 4 feet from floor level. The position that your man fitted your sockets would be just fine for me.

The point I am trying to make is you say "He knew the sockets were for home office equipment" but this is no use as he could have reasonably thought your printers etc were going to be the same height as mine.

I conclude that this is in no way ANY fault of the electricians!! (it hurts me to say that because I do like to have a little dig at them! :laugh:)
 
As I keep saying the height was not marked because I thought there was a standard height for sockets for desk level equipment.

My question to you is if you were putting your equipment at desk level what height would you have positioned the sockets?
 
I'd say it's your fault, you neglected to give heights, you neglected to address the situation at first fix, you then neglected to address it at 2nd fix, you then neglected to address it before decorating.

High level is Light switch height, low level is 12" from floor to bottom of box, and mid level is worktop height.

You stated high level and now you realise you should have said mid level, there's no excuse at all IMHO that gets you out of the wallpapering issue, as there is no way that you couldn't realise they were too high before that if they're at light switch height.

Just one of those things in life that you gotta take it on the chin, realise you made an error and stop trying to find excuses to blame the tradesman for doing exactly what you requested and for you letting it get to the point where your new wallpaper is going to be damaged.

That might sound harsh, but it's what I'd have done and assumed you were putting in one of the desks the printer sits on a shelf above the monitor, when you were asking for high level.


If you had wanted worktop/desktop height then that's what you should have stated instead of high level, the fact you made your own plan would have me believing you knew what you were requesting, so no need to question anything.

Hope that helps
 
Not taking sides here BUT when ever a customer asks me for something "non standard" like this I will mark the wall and check that they are happy.

Why didn't you notice this before the room was plastered? let alone before it was wall papered!
 
What do they say, assumed makes an --- out of you and me!

The learning here is you as the client needs to state at what height you wnat things placed, I have made similar mistakes numerous times when I have not had site visits with contractors and have assumed they knew what I was talking about or wanted. The plugs can be moved so not the end of the world and a bit of decorating is perhaps required. Personally I would not get hung up on who is to blame and just get it rectified. I don't think you have any case for forcing him to do the work again for free as this should have been picked up by you prior to decoration or on the day or so after he finished the work. A snall claim in my opinion is throwing good money after bad.

Personally to avoid these type of issues I get people to do me a quick sketch as to where they want things with heights agreed, this way there is no argument later.
 
Hi OP.

It does sound like you are trying to blame someone other than yourself. As you have mentioned yourself "I didn't notice that something was wrong because there isn't anything to gauge the height with."

How did you expect the electrician to know exactly what height to put the socket at, you didn't know until the furniture was in by the sound of it?

It was bad planning. Maybe he should have asked you specific questions for each height of each socket. Not the guys fault in my opinion. Get him to fix it. You pay. Do you not have a strip of wallpaper left over to do the socket part again?

He can fix this while doing the other things you want looking at.
 
for the sake of a hour or 2 labour, pay him to lower the sockets. hang a couple of small photos of the missus and kids over the holes or line them out and have a couple of niches.
 
6 of 1, half a dozen of the other in my opinion.

The electrician probably should of asked for the height, but it's easily done. The sockets have been there for all to see from first fix, to plastering to second fix and then decorating. You've had plenty of chances to ask for them to be moved.

For what it's worth, if it was my job I'd be happy to drop the sockets at no cost, but I wouldn't expect to pay for any redecorating. That would be up to the client unless I'd been told a specific height and I'd put them in the wrong place.
 

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