Is it a nessun dormer? That's usually a tenor.
Is it a nessun dormer? That's usually a tenor.
Electric rads are the nuts these days hang them on the wall and plug them in £500 for two, Q rad are decent by dimplex.
It is a combi boiler...quite a new one I think...not sure about anything else. We are having a second viewing next week.
Up North?
Labour, radiator,pipe, valves and fittings all included?
Yup.
Update.. job was move radiator in one room to a different wall and install new radiator in loft. Cost of labour (inc pipes etc) £190. Son-in-law had already bought the radiator.
Still not bad.
Seems a good deal, but lets break it down a bit.
We'll assume valve's included, the rads are already carried into the relevant rooms (1500x600 T22 - " It's there in the hall mate, couldn't carry it up stairs to the loft myself" and he's not VAT registered and not cash in hand..
Material's inc pipe, fittings - £30, leaves £160
Directly on that job she/he will be taxed/NI (£35) van fuel/parking etc (£10) and across their year they've got a % of Public liability insurance, van, van tax, van insurance, tools to use on jobs etc - (£5)
Time on job - Assume combi, and a partial drain down, and refill/vent, moving carpets/wardrobes/beds, lifting and relaying floor boards/T&G Chip boards etc.
So that's £110 across at least 4 hours depending upon awkwardness, push fit or soldering, surface or hidden pipework, plasterboard walls with insulation inside, lathe and plaster walls etc.
Yes, that's a good deal i'd say.
Yup.
Update.. job was move radiator in one room to a different wall and install new radiator in loft. Cost of labour (inc pipes etc) £190. Son-in-law had already bought the radiator.
Still not bad.
Using your figures, a 'good deal' gives the plumber £110 for half a day's work, or £200 for a full day (deducting a little for travelling between jobs) - after overheads in your figures are allowed for.
If they work 5 days a week, for 48 weeks a year, they have a net income of £48K (clearly a bit less than that, as time needs to be taken out for the cost of providing estimates, book-keeping etc etc).
And that is at what is considered a cheap rate - previous estimates in this thread were 3, 4 or 5 times that
As a skilled tradesman myself, the worst sort of customer is the one that opens with ‘I’ve googled it and...’Not sure i get your point tbh.
I pay people the rate they deserve, for jobs i cant do - e.g recently a conveyancer charged me over a grand to extend my lease. He's also a trained professional, and the worse he could do was screw it up or take a long time over it (he did the latter quite well actually.. ) but at least he didnt spill loads of water over my floor/ruin my heating system.
Assuming the person above didn't either, then he did a good job, that presumably you and the OP cant.
I dont get upset over other peoples earnings, good for them if they've studied and trained do be in that place.
Unless of course your angle is more of a snotty view that 'tradesmen are not worth it' and 'i can do their job by watching a few You Tube videos'
As a skilled tradesman myself, the worst sort of customer is the one that opens with ‘I’ve googled it and...’
Closely followed by ‘my mate reckons’
The amount of total clusterfvcks I’ve walked into because someone has had a go themselves...
Note to customers...it may appear that the mush doing your work doesn’t take long or appears to make it look easy, but that’s probably down to all the years spent in colleges and actually putting the hours in, in the field.
Something I keep reminding my mates of when I charge £98 an hour for schools leisure centres, I might only do 2 or 3 jobs for them a month and might only do one job a day and run around looking at jobs doing Bill's the rest of the week earning nothing so it's all relativeUsing your figures, a 'good deal' gives the plumber £110 for half a day's work, or £200 for a full day (deducting a little for travelling between jobs) - after overheads in your figures are allowed for.
If they work 5 days a week, for 48 weeks a year, they have a net income of £48K (clearly a bit less than that, as time needs to be taken out for the cost of providing estimates, book-keeping etc etc).
And that is at what is considered a cheap rate - previous estimates in this thread were 3, 4 or 5 times that
Something I keep reminding my mates of when I charge £98 an hour for schools leisure centres, I might only do 2 or 3 jobs for them a month and might only do one job a day and run around looking at jobs doing Bill's the rest of the week earning nothing so it's all relative
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G in jay
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Using your figures, a 'good deal' gives the plumber £110 for half a day's work, or £200 for a full day (deducting a little for travelling between jobs) - after overheads in your figures are allowed for.
If they work 5 days a week, for 48 weeks a year, they have a net income of £48K (clearly a bit less than that, as time needs to be taken out for the cost of providing estimates, book-keeping etc etc).
And that is at what is considered a cheap rate - previous estimates in this thread were 3, 4 or 5 times that
Using your figures, a 'good deal' gives the plumber £110 for half a day's work, or £200 for a full day (deducting a little for travelling between jobs) - after overheads in your figures are allowed for.
If they work 5 days a week, for 48 weeks a year, they have a net income of £48K (clearly a bit less than that, as time needs to be taken out for the cost of providing estimates, book-keeping etc etc).
And that is at what is considered a cheap rate - previous estimates in this thread were 3, 4 or 5 times that
As a skilled tradesman myself, the worst sort of customer is the one that opens with ‘I’ve googled it and...’
Closely followed by ‘my mate reckons’
The amount of total clusterfvcks I’ve walked into because someone has had a go themselves...
Note to customers...it may appear that the mush doing your work doesn’t take long or appears to make it look easy, but that’s probably down to all the years spent in colleges and actually putting the hours in, in the field.
Is it a nessun dormer? That's usually a tenor.