Why do your own maintenance & repair work?

   / Why do your own maintenance & repair work? #41  
I know one thing. Over the years I have hired many contractors. Some good, some bad. But almost without exception, if I had not been there to micromanage, things would have gone wrong or been done in ways other to my liking and standards. So, having money, and just hiring someone, will likely not get you what you want. Often the job will be done, substandard (which is nowadays standard, I guess) , you will pay, and won't even be the wiser. Often until later.
 
   / Why do your own maintenance & repair work? #42  
I know one thing. Over the years I have hired many contractors. Some good, some bad. But almost without exception, if I had not been there to micromanage, things would have gone wrong or been done in ways other to my liking and standards. So, having money, and just hiring someone, will likely not get you what you want. Often the job will be done, substandard (which is nowadays standard, I guess) , you will pay, and won't even be the wiser. Often until later.

The last thing in the world a contractor wants is a non professional home/business owner looking over their shoulder and second guessing activity...
Professional building plans generally come with detailed specifications and drawings likewise with included engineering...

Contracts should cover all aspects of a job from the act of commencement to the final walk through...anything else and you are just hiring a labor force...
 
   / Why do your own maintenance & repair work? #43  
Of course, the way things are done nowadays, a contractor wouldn't want to be under scrutiny. I'm not talking about watching a worker put in a screw and asking him what make of screwdriver that is, and you once owned one just like it. lol

Besides, if things are being done right, I will have nothing to say, and I won't mind that. Seems only possible in some alternate Universe though.

My Lady friend manages CONDOS. Not a day goes by, that I don't here more stories of poor quality and utter incompetence by "contractors". It's really sad. Someone paid for shoddy work. Now the owners wll have to pay for more shoddy work from a different contractor, the defects only coming to light, again later, and so forth. NOBODY does a job right anymore. For one thing, it takes great amounts of time to do something right, maybe many extra trips, and that just aint happening.

And BTW, I am a Contractor. Have been for thirty years. So, I am not talking from an armchair or as a homeowner. I have been on enough sites myself to see the crap that goes on.
 
   / Why do your own maintenance & repair work? #44  
almost without exception, if I had not been there to micromanage, things would have gone wrong
Oh man. My worst example was I acted as general contractor for a second floor addition on my house in town. Came home for lunch to see how it was going and the framing contractor was about to carry a whole truckload of lumber up to frame the floor joists etc. He had gotten the building inspector to sign off his demolition phase without putting the piers under the house (under specific walls) needed to bear this additional weight. The house is old-school lathe & plaster, the interior walls and ceilings would have been settling and cracking for years with all that weight unsupported. I refused the progress pay that was due at this first inspection. He said his payroll and quarterly insurance were due today and I would bankrupt him. I told him fine you're bankrupt then. Those piers got put under there real quick. For that project I did the finish carpentry, paint etc but working full time with some responsibility to travel, I didn't have time for the more labor-intensive phases.

Added after seeing the other posts in the last few minutes: My project supervision wasn't just to harass the subcontractors. At the time I worked in a coat & tie job but previously I had held a Journeyman Carpenter card and later was a licensed building contractor during the years I bought and renovated rentals.
 
   / Why do your own maintenance & repair work? #45  
As has been previously mentioned...skilled labor is in decline...a large portion of the retiring baby boom generation is taking a big chunk out of the skilled labor force...
We are in a world of CNC and 3D printed consumer goods etc...

Building and maintenance contractors are only as good as their mechanics and sub contractors who are in the same boat when it comes to hiring skilled, dedicated workers...

The younger generations who choose trades over college degrees work in a field just long enough to be "OK" at something and immediately expect to be earning top wages for turning out OK work...

Some things robots will likely never be able to do as efficiently as a highly skilled human...but it won't keep them from trying...
 
   / Why do your own maintenance & repair work? #46  
One of the things I can't fix myself .....

Bought a new refrigerator. Within a year, it wasn't cooling right, not making ice, cycling on/off funny. Service guy shows up (older guy too) ... 'I know what that is, I'll order a part and be back in a few days'. Never really even looked at the box, was here all of 10 minutes.

Come backs, puts the part in, never really looks at anything else. 'Give it 24-36 hours to see how it cools'. Seemed OK for a few days, but had to call them back. This time he decides to 'burp the system', remove some freon, add more. Theory is that there may have been a speck of junk in the system blocking port somewhere and this should clear it. It sorta worked OK for a few months, but not real well. Now into an extended warranty I bought into because I suspected it would still have trouble, I called them again. I forget exactly what happened that time, but I had to make a fourth call later. This time they decided to scrap it under the extended warranty and buy me a new unit. Before the guy left (different guy, but also older), I asked him to gas it up again to give me a few more weeks to wait for the check and find a new one. He agreed. Got the check a few days later.

That was almost four years ago and I'm still using the same unit. It has worked perfectly since that last gas up I suggested. Kept the check basically as a refund for the extended service contract and time and trouble.
 
   / Why do your own maintenance & repair work? #47  
Of the workers that (even) show up for work, many leave their brains and attention somewhere else. Men can't go off to work anymore. They are expected to be part of the family 24/7. Half of what attention they have, is on their cell phones. No wonder if things get done at all, they get messed up.

And one excavation contractor I hired would constantly be sittting in his idling hoe, talking work on his cell phone. Maybe, that can't be avoided, but it is very annoying. It's no wonder, their whole attention is not on the job they are at. How did contractors used to work a whole day, being away from a phone?

Unless I need my phone to call the central station or tech support, my phone stays in the truck when at a customers. That is only respectfull. Also, stays in my truck when i am having a meal with someone.
 
   / Why do your own maintenance & repair work? #49  
The whiz kids are incapable of figuring out something that simple, yet the world expects me to figure out my totally non-intuitive smart phone, that's changes all the time. That Dial might have been standard for thirty years. My Dad still has dial service!
 
   / Why do your own maintenance & repair work? #50  
That Dial might have been standard for thirty years. My Dad still has dial service!
More like a century.

There is still an application for a dial phone if you still have copper-wire phone service. The phone is powered from the line, not from plugging into your wall. So long as the physical cable is intact between you and the local exchange, it will work fine during a power outage.
 

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