ChatterBank6 mins ago
My Central Heating Was Not Working After Being Installed 4 Years Ago So I Contacted The Firm Who Put It It
11 Answers
they said a service would be £90.00 and what was wrong I then said it was not working which they said you do not need a service you need an engineer to look at it. So I booked an engineer for a Thursday. They said on the wednesday we have an engineer down the road to you who can be at your place within an hour Great. He arrived and said your batteries are flat on the thermostat and replaced them in 5 minutes They then sent be a bill for 5 minutes work for £90 which works out at over £1000 per hour .I refuse to pay. am I right. OR what would be a fair payment for their time
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No best answer has yet been selected by gollob. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You haven't got a leg to stand on - it's possible the company might reduce the charge as a goodwill gesture - but they certainly don't have to.
It might help swallow the pill if I paraphrase an old witticism :
"To fitting batteries - £25 ...
... to having the knowledge and training to understand that the problem was the batteries and to knowing how to fit them - £65".
It might help swallow the pill if I paraphrase an old witticism :
"To fitting batteries - £25 ...
... to having the knowledge and training to understand that the problem was the batteries and to knowing how to fit them - £65".
Most of the £90 will be the callout fee which you have to pay just for the engineer to come out. The rest is the cost of parts, the actual time spent on the job (normally a 1/2 hour minimum time applies) and VAT. The call out fee was £50 the last time I needed an engineer and that was 10 years ago. So £90 is about right.
Had that very convversation with a Scottish Gas operative last night as he lamped my fancy chrome radiator with his trust adjustable wrench.
How we chortled.
In related news, an elderly friend of the boss returned from holiday to find her cordless phone handset inop. I took the battery compartment cover off to discover two alkaline batteries in there instead of rechargables.
Returning with a pair from B&M at £2.99 I went to fit them only to discover that the first expert had fitted two new Duracell alkalines, got no result and walked away scratching his head.
The rechargable ones worked right away.
You get what you pay for (or not since she hasn't yet coughed the three quid) :-)
How we chortled.
In related news, an elderly friend of the boss returned from holiday to find her cordless phone handset inop. I took the battery compartment cover off to discover two alkaline batteries in there instead of rechargables.
Returning with a pair from B&M at £2.99 I went to fit them only to discover that the first expert had fitted two new Duracell alkalines, got no result and walked away scratching his head.
The rechargable ones worked right away.
You get what you pay for (or not since she hasn't yet coughed the three quid) :-)
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