Did anyone say to rant and rave and shove a gun in the GCs face and demand he sign a waiver?
Just have a section in your contract about it. If you don't, and the situation arises, then calmly inform the GC about your concerns. If he throws you off the job, then you don't need him as a customer anyway.
Exactly - contracts are about contracts... If questioned about it, just say its a boiler plate and you have reasons to have it in there. i.e. a poor glass installation should not be up to you to 'make due' or own if it blows up.... Go hire a glass guy - you bet he has simular language in his contract... The GC doesn't want to own it, and will point the finger at you, and the owner won't pay for it... So if you have something in your contract specifying the parameters of what you NEED to make make an installation work - then the GC doesn't sign off on it... And the glass guy does not get to 'slap and dash' with the opprotuminty to do it 2-3 times on your dime... (Because you don't know how to stand up for yourself...) GC passes on the spec - glass guy forced to comply for payment - you get a better install, and the situation avoids itself...
I would have camera ready and have them remove the broken one. If mastic is more than 6 inches from the hole i would blame them. Also be looking to see if the mastic made contact to both the drywall and mirror, if not the wall was bowed and mastic did no good.
Oh I agree - I would also note the glass thickness and the mastic thickness - if this was 1/4" on 3/8" blobs far from the light it was a
set-up to fail IMO. There are quite a few mastic manuacturers -
Some specify that it should get a blob the size of a ping-pong ball every sq' - that spreads out as the glass goes on, and spreads to ~4 1/2", 'ever square foot.... Leaving ~7 1/2" between the mastic, with a 4/0 opening leaves ~1 3/4" from the egde of the opening...
Another one suggests the use of a 1/8" notched trowel and achieve 60% coverage...
But everone I have ever seen broken had a few blobs neary 2' apart just to hold the mirror up-right resting on edge on a backsplash or clips...
I agree, its a stress fracture. The mirror was not properly installed.
It would have cracked anyway
Of course it was a stress fracture... How? Short of use of an impact gun to install the #8's to mount it, and/or a ground screw or other metal edge on the glass. Then the glass was not set up to have fixtures on it...