Hi All,
What do you guys reckon is the best way to deal with local rogues?
I have just done a quick trip around 4 recent installs in our area, and without exception I can find serious fault with each and every one of them just from a ground level visual inspection.
The most common one by far is insufficent distance from either eaves, apex or roof edge, in some instances they are actually overhanging, the other faults are: large gaps unders slates (or tiles) as they have just put a slate back in instead of flashing (grinding out), mounting panels in landscape and anchoring them on horizontal rails on the short edge of the panels (some panels manufacturers may allow this, the one I photo'd was Sharp panels which will invalidate the warranty), badly weatherprooofed cable entries, generally shoddy wokmanship, and a blatant disregard for the Health and Safety Working at Heights regulations and guidleines (including using a JCB bucket at height to work in / from).
I feel quite sorry for the end customer as in their ignorance these installers have sometimes created a disaster waiting to happen.
So, my question is really twofold:
a) Who to report these installations to when I don't know who installed it.
b) How to protect prospective customers from choosing one of these guys (who because of their methods are always cheaper)
Any ideas? Becasue if we don't stop these guys, the whole industry will end up with a very bad reputation as soon as a strong wind blows.
What do you guys reckon is the best way to deal with local rogues?
I have just done a quick trip around 4 recent installs in our area, and without exception I can find serious fault with each and every one of them just from a ground level visual inspection.
The most common one by far is insufficent distance from either eaves, apex or roof edge, in some instances they are actually overhanging, the other faults are: large gaps unders slates (or tiles) as they have just put a slate back in instead of flashing (grinding out), mounting panels in landscape and anchoring them on horizontal rails on the short edge of the panels (some panels manufacturers may allow this, the one I photo'd was Sharp panels which will invalidate the warranty), badly weatherprooofed cable entries, generally shoddy wokmanship, and a blatant disregard for the Health and Safety Working at Heights regulations and guidleines (including using a JCB bucket at height to work in / from).
I feel quite sorry for the end customer as in their ignorance these installers have sometimes created a disaster waiting to happen.
So, my question is really twofold:
a) Who to report these installations to when I don't know who installed it.
b) How to protect prospective customers from choosing one of these guys (who because of their methods are always cheaper)
Any ideas? Becasue if we don't stop these guys, the whole industry will end up with a very bad reputation as soon as a strong wind blows.