newbury
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2009
- Messages
- 14,187
- Location
- From Vt, in Va, retiring to MS
- Tractor
- Kubota's - B7610, M4700
That is a big sore point with me.What irritates me is when the guy that's supposed to do the job asks to use my tools.<snip>
I had some expensive concrete block foundation repair to be done by a "qualified" crew recommended by the architect/inspector. The doofus borrowed my 50 year old contractor grade wheelbarrow WITHOUT ASKING, used chairs I had and got concrete all over them, tried to use lumber I had, all while charging top dollar. Towards the end of the job they had 2 piles of sand and stone left over and the blasted guy wanted to charge me about what one would pay for the same quantity bought by the small bag at a high priced hardware store. He got fairly agitated when I told him to clean it up and it took his 2 man crew about an hour, plus a long trip to do it. It must have cost him 4 times what the materials cost to clean it up versus giving it to me.
I had another contractor try and borrow my tools because he "forgot" his. Since it was near the end of the job I let him drive the 15 miles one way to get his tools so he could finish the job, and I never expect to use him again.
<snip>
But don't discount the amount of time it takes you to perform the task. Even though you are working for yourself, it isn't 'free'. But, in essence, I agree. Prices for everything has reached a point that DIY is more and more reasonable.
But for those of us who are retired and enjoy getting the job done our time is already paid for.
Being in the building trades I can tell you NOTHING is cheap. Not materials, not labor, and certainly not insurance. If you put the whole package together you are looking at $80 to $140 dollars an hour for a man and a truck. We only do high end commercial work so our labor pool is better than run of the mill residential. Anyway... don't expect this to get any better anytime soon; young people rarely go into the building trades.
Yes, but we can look forward to robots doing the work.