Has Electrician made a mistake with height? | on ElectriciansForums

Discuss Has Electrician made a mistake with height? in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

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.
 
The electrician has my sympathies here. He has obviously installed them at the height he thought you required them, keeping them at switch height for aesthetic reasons. What height are your switches? Is it the old height of around 1300mm or are they around the 1metre mark? The latter dosent seem to bad.
 
In my view it should have discussed between the both of you where the sockets were to be placed. So poor communications all around. Your electrician is not a mind reader, but saying that, if one of my clients stipulated a 'non standard' height for some sockets I would ask exactly where to put them.

If the cables are coming from below then it should not be too much hassle to reposition them, obviously some minor plastering and redeco would be then needed.
 
My view is that you should have designed the circuit and specifically told the electrician the heights you required, as only you would know this.
Printers can be quite high and he may have deemed the heights adequate.
 
So he should have asked me before he put them in as they are a non-standard height? The printers sink on cabinets that are desk height.

I am a lay person so thought there was a standard height for high level plugs in the same way there is a standard height for low level plugs. That is why I didn't specify the height in my plans that I gave him.
 
I would suggest a breakdown in communication has occured, in his position I personally would have confirmed the height with yourself before commiting to it, slightly unprofessional in their approach to the work but it may have been a genuine mis-understanding.
In the trade we have 2 standard heights, low level and desktop/worktop level, as you ask for the sockets to be higher so you can easily access them he may have interpreted this to mean higher than the standard.. again, I think its an error on his part not to confirm or discuss the exact height before commiting to it.

This IMHO is a 50/50 call where both yourself and your electrician are equally at fault if you find that they are too high, how you go about resolving this maybe to meet each other in the middle and come to a compromise.

A few questions may slide the blame either way like was the sockets clearly positions on first fix where the issue could have been addressed a lot easier, did you not see the positions at any point during the installation or was the work started and completed before you saw the outcome?
 
Don't blame the sparky, your both at fault, he used his judgement, you both are at fault. And in theory, he's put sockets in if no specification was made to specifics, then he has done what you paid him to do in my opinion!!
 
If you had asked me for high level sockets then you'd have got them fitted 6" below ceiling level unless otherwise specified.
If you'd specified above desk height or above worktop height you'd have got them put at those heights (standard worktop height is around 900mm and standard desk height is around 750mm)
The last home office I wired the printer was sited on top of the filing cabinet so the socket was put in at around 5' above floor level.

If you have supplied a plan with no better specification than 'high level' then you can't really complain!
There isn't really a standard height for low level sockets either, there is a traditional height of 1' to the centre (or bottom depending on opinion) there is a required height for new builds, a different required height for new builds specifically intended for disabled people etc etc etc
 
I gave him plans that showed a bird's eye view of the layout of the home office and roughly where the plugs are to be positioned (not height) so e.g. either side of a double bed and behind the TV etc. He knew that I did the plans myself and during the renovation he had asked for me specific locations for switches and plug sockets but for some reason he didn't for these ones. I thought there was a standard desktop height but agree that we are both at fault. Do you think I should pay him to have them moved?

I didn't notice until now because of the scale of the renovation. The house is over 4 floors and was being completely guttered so I had lots of things to do, materials to order and check and much bigger problems then this to deal with. I also have a young child and baby to look after and we don't live on site.
 
Yes he needs paying to alter the sockets now. It was a large job and in the absence of any specific drawing or instruction as to the height he made an executive decision to maintain the continuity of progress on the job. It should not be too big or costly a job I would imagine.
 
I'm am assuming this is an office in your house? Is 30 cm too high really such an issue? It's going to be surrounded by printers etc. I'm sure it's honest mistakes on both parts. You have said yourself you have had a lot on your plate so maybe didn't make it clear.
different if it was in your kitchen or some fancy room , but an office, I would be tempted to live with it.
 
Oh no, definitely not the end of the world especially as it has renovation has taken nearly a year. There are a few other issues with his work such as the dimmable LED strip light not dimming so perhaps he can sort them all out in one go.

Thank you for all your replies. I just wondered whether it was my fault or the Electrician's fault. Okay, I will speak to him about how it is going to be resolved and work out who is going to pay the decorator. It is tricky because the wall has recently been wallpapered.
 
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.
 

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