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what would you generally ask a customer do to prepare for us coming into rewire, i am in the middle of arranging for me to do a rewire the first one i have done on my own, things like moving furniture the kithchen, lifting carpets, laminate flooring ?
 
Bugger off on holiday while your in house they just get under your feet
 
well...as far as testing is concerned....then a quick Ze is standard...

you need to know how much access you will have....and the price should reflect this as well....

so ...the more crap they shift...the less (slightly) you charge...

make em aware of it...so as an incentive to cart all that junk to the tip
 
Every rewire is different with customers getting involved to different levels.

I have had some that have moved furniture, taken carpets up, had the brews coming all day, and put it all back after I left. I have had others that just go out for the day and leave you to it.

This needs to be discussed at pricing time as it can be a lot more work and easily add a day or two. You also need to set a schedule between you and the customer on occupied rewires, as in which rooms you can have on which days etc. Remember to plan ahead with your wiring so you are not lifting any floor twice for forgotten cables.
 
thanks guys I just want tae make sure I am not leaving myself with all the work but not asking the customers to do too much, once you've lifted laminate flooring would you just leave it for them to deal with or would that be down to me ?
 
The one I am just doing is a lived in rewire, the bloke insists on wanting to watch his tv whilst I'm chasing walls round him... The house is a total tip worse than a hoarder and toy have to wipe your feet on the way out. He had not moved a thing or don't the slightest anything to help. It's a total pain and stupidly I undercharged it, but that's my fault.

My advice would be, if it's got laminate, don't entertain it and just get some other poor sod to do it, secondly get them to move all junk to the middles of the rooms with sufficient space round edge to work and cover there junk.

Oh he loft, don't get me started, if it's boarded, oh god, erm... Try and back out as its a pain as they never go down in the same order if you are like me. This one I'm doing, his daughter was again dresser and there was a load of coated chip board in the loft and I didn't see that there was a load of shampoo spilt on it which I slipped on and nearly went through the ceiling. Get them to move everything out.

Jees, I sound like a right moaning git. The best ones are empty houses with nobody living in it, makes life easier.
 
thanks guys I just want tae make sure I am not leaving myself with all the work but not asking the customers to do too much, once you've lifted laminate flooring would you just leave it for them to deal with or would that be down to me ?

you'd have to be insane to take on any job that involves taking up & re-laying laminate.
i've actually refused jobs that required such , let it be someone elses problem.
 
what would you generally ask a customer do to prepare for us coming into rewire, i am in the middle of arranging for me to do a rewire the first one i have done on my own, things like moving furniture the kithchen, lifting carpets, laminate flooring ?

Remove ALL belongings from the property, lift all floor coverings & take them off site, remove all fitted units, kitchen, bedroom furniture etc., move out, and not to contact me until I tell them the job is done!

Perhaps why I don't get much domestic, plus the VAT, the VAT is the killer! ;)
 
Occupied rewires must be ultimate job from hell ! You need careful wording in a contract covering what supply will be available at night, what IS covered re carpets & furniture moving/replacing & above that = extra cost @ x/hr etc etc

Personally I would be happy to lift a laminate floor "with no guarantee" but leave customer to arrange refit

Not worth your hassle as many are poor diy fit in first place.
 

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