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I'm in a different industry, I understand your engineers point of view,he's covering himself and his work, quite why he wants to charge you for the cert is beyond me as he would be required to carry out checks to make sure its a) safe to work on in the first place b) with gas, safe to walk away from after the work.
After the work we do we provide documentation that gets you to sign after you've witnessed that we have left the system as we have described and that you are happy.Its a bit more involved than that, I've just paraphrased it for you.
....trying to say in that comment. Yes I dont understand why he wants to charge you extra for something he should be doing as rote on any job he's done or doing.It should be included in the price.
....trying to say in that comment. Yes I dont understand why he wants to charge you extra for something he should be doing as rote on any job he's done or doing.It should be included in the price.
No it shouldnt, the ONLY time a gas safety check has to be done is when a landlord rents out a property and requires a gas safety check, i never ever do one with an install, i fill out the LEGALLY REQUIRED comissioning sheet at the back of the MI.
No engineer has to carry out a safety check unless:
A paid to do so and B when carrying out an inspection of a landlords property, no other circumstance requires one, regardless of what you may think or what your last plumber done.
here we go again....Its simple rule one is it safe for me to work on, has everything that needs to be isolated been done so. Anyone who has worked on a permit site will know these checks, transfer them to what youre doing. Oh and by the way its an extra £25.00 for me to give you the necessary paperwork. Steve, your Nacoss the call forms you have to fill in and give to the client surely youre not telling me you charge them for it.I sincerely wouldnt have thought so.
Now its a different matter if that person was called in to purely certify a system, yes there is a specific charge.
Lets be honest, how many times do you and me included inspect the whole system as laid down in BS after an activation, its just not practical, but we cover ourselves by issuing certificates of testing the area in question and sign it.
...and agree with what you say. However, and I now feel I need to reread the OP as I may have interpreted it incorrectly, but do you not as an engineer after every job you do you leave a company headed document saying what you have completed and system is safe?
seems your confusing a certificate and a work docket ...............
Well when you come to sell a house, as a selelr, you need to stump up certificates, along with guarantees, and service reports... or the solicitors rightfully get really twitchy
Yes and if thats the case you pay
the only certificates you need when selling a house are:
Notification certificates for installation work
and a report on headed paer/safety chek if the surveyor feels the boiler looks a bit iffy.
All the above (except notification) you pay for.
Your confusion your industry with mine, just because you do things a certain way does not mean that other industries do, our registration with gas safe cover customers no documents are needed.
This is for the majority of HEATING companies if not all, please do not tell me the way you think it should be done as thats what you do, your not a heating engineer
boiler/heating repair - no certificate
install - no certificate
servicing - no certificate (if any a service certfificate or service card)
flushing/radiator/pipework - no certificate
wait for it...................
landlord inspection - certificate
no buts, no "well thats not how we do it", no "its bad practice"
Thats the way it is, thats the rules, thats the score.
So if you want a certificate for anythig other than a landlord inspection then expect to pay![]()
Try this Bri,if i may :-
boiler/heating repair - no certificate ( Invoice/Paperwork/Guarantee left with client )
install - no certificate ( Invoice/Paperwork/Guarantee left with client )
servicing - no certificate (if any a service certfificate or service card)( Invoice client )
flushing/radiator/pipework - no certificate ( Simple job-Simple Invoice to client )
Unless any of the above is rented accommodation,then Paperwork to the landlord.
No gas inspection certificate would be issued for any of the above works unless it is requested,then chargeable.
Chargeable because there might be another 4/5/6/7 seperate appliances in the property ( cooker or hob/oven,balanced flue fire/s,fridge,multipoint,meters, Etc Etc ) and all these would need to be taken into consideration.
Remember also,let`s say there was a leak on the supply to the Hob,that would have to be rectified before issuing the certificate,and guess what,that would be chargeable too.
Skyhi2.
Originally Posted by G. Lasagne![]()
Yes and if thats the case you pay
the only certificates you need when selling a house are:
Notification certificates for installation work
and a report on headed paer/safety chek if the surveyor feels the boiler looks a bit iffy.
All the above (except notification) you pay for.
What is in a HIP
See an example HIP
The HIP is made up of required (compulsory) and authorised (optional) items.
There shouldn't be any marketing or advertising material in the pack, so make sure it contains official information only.
From 6 April 2009, the HIP must be available and contain the following documents on the first day a property is put on the market:
If the following documents are unavailable when marketing begins, they should be added to the HIP as soon as they are available. These documents must be included within 28 days of the date the property was first placed on the market:
- Home Information Pack Index
- Property Information Questionnaire (PIQ)
- Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) or Predicted Energy Assessment (PEA)
- sustainability information (required for newly built homes)
- sale statement
- evidence of title
Just a bit of help for when you get round to selling your next house.
- standard searches (local authority and drainage and water)
- a copy of the lease for leasehold properties
- commonhold documents, where appropriate
The thread is about GAS WORK, im not talking about hips, read the thread the only GAS GAS GAS certficates you need are etc etc etc,
...if you do a job for me, the customer I expect you to leave me with paperwork, end of. It guarantees that you have carried out the work that I have asked you to do, it also guarantees me the knowledge that I can be happy that the work has been carried out to my satisfaction, and it covers you in the event of any query.
Any contractor who walks away from a job without leaving any sort of paperwork, doesnt matter what industry, deserves what they get.
Steve(Saxondale) and I both know, in our industry, the possible implications of not carrying out this very, very, simple task.Now apply that concept to a gas engineer and the outcomes are the same.
I will supply you with a personal example, when I was a service engineer for a well known national company,I attended a House of Fraser store in North Wales to install a vital piece of equipment. when I got there with the kit, the ancillary eqpt hadnt been installed by another contractor which meant I couldnt finalise the job. That night a fire broke out and the building was raised to the ground.I was summoned, that night by managers in the early hours to explain why this happened. Fortunately for me I had paperwork signed by the customer which explained why I couldnt finish the job.This saved the company millions of pounds in a law suit. So why are we bickering about whats needed and whats not.
You just make sure your arse is covered on every job you do, and if thats the way you want to work you'll never do a job for me.
but thats still not a certificate is it, thats just "paperwork" - our certs cost us £25 a time from the regulator, the certificates we see from the fire guys are printed at home on A4 ................... see?
...and as Ive said to you before its a money making scheme for others, charging you £25.00 for the priviledge of having a badge on it, never mind about your experience and knowledge. So what if people use A4 printed certs, I can get a 4 pads of triplicate headed sheets from a printers for less than you pay NSI or Nacoss Cets and citing the relevant British Standard clauses. Doesnt mean I do less of a job. Dont get me started on badges and accreditation again Steve.
I agree with the poster, it is getting a bit out of hand in the house selling market.I'm doing some work for some friends at the moment who have their houses for sale, just little odd jobs that they cant manage in order to satisfy the HIPS. More money for a badge.
as you say - your certs are worthless because anyone can get one, which IS the point i`m trying to make ........... but please don`t worry about it any longer.
you never explained why you sign on on a Thursday - ready yet?
@ saxondale,you mean £25.00 for a refill pad ?
Skyhi2.