radiopet said:
hmmm....that is a bit harsh actually Larry........I CAN DO...quite fine and have been doing for 20 years.....I also do home inspections.....when needed and when contacted......
No offense intended. It was aimed at the usual coach or teacher situations. "Those who can't do, coach (or teach)."
My experiences with HI's are what they are, and not of my choosing. The two most recent ones are calls that resulted from horrible inspections. The first was an all-out fire, and the second resulted in new parents who just bought a house and had to spend a week without any power.
The fire job was a result of no, and I mean no, grounding. The EGC in the #10 NM feeding the water heater burned, because it was the sole GEC for the house. The service had (obviously illegally) been upgraded to 200a, but only from the load lugs of the meter.
There were NO cable clamps, even on the incoming SE cable, no grounds at all, and the house had recently had a new HVAC system installed, probably all part of the same job. The house had just received a glowing (pun intended) HI report.
I did an in-depth report to the owner's insurance company and a complete service change with all-new parts. The fire department report said the incoming service was still energized even after the meter was pulled! Apparently the neutral was hot, and explains the melted EGC.
The second job was also approved in an HI report, with a special mention of the upgraded electrical system. This was definitely recently done as part of a central-HVAC installation. Missing from the report was the lack of cable clamps or anything else related to the new HVAC system.
Also missing was the mention that the line-side service cable was not up-sized. This resulted in a line-side lug melting in the 100a meter base, the POCO responding to a partial power failure, and them cutting the service drop completely.
Because the second job had never been permitted, we were able to get the POCO work done at no charge, as they do for a real upgrade, and we permitted it as if it had never been done. We had to correct everything wrong, and it cost the homeowners almost the same as a real upgrade.
I will give HI's one credit when it comes to their electrical inspections: They never seem to miss the infamous double-tapped breaker which, while legal only on so-marked breakers, results in nuisance tripping at the worst. (Yes, this last paragraph is sarcasm.)