Sure when it involves off hours work, coordinated shutdowns etc.
All the costs of the facilities labor and any lost production due to the shutdown on top of the actual repair costs should be paid for by the contractor that screwed up.
+1... liquidated damages, the wild card.
here's my take on it. you have damaged conductors in a pipe. the wire was good when it
was pulled in. some boneheaded install damaged it. the same boneheads who damaged
the last 30' put in the rest of it. you will not know the status of the entire run until you
pull the bad 30' out of the pipe, separate them, and do a PI test on the cables. you are
gonna have 3 or 4 guys there, and costs accumulate quickly.
i pulled out some old copper feeders that were bad recently. they were in pvc, and below
the water line, and the insulation was so damaged by the installers 13 years ago, that the
wire had been sitting down there boiling itself dry until the lines were shut off, then it
filled up with water, and was toast. as i was scrapping it, i was cutting it in 10' lengths.
you could stand a 10 piece on end, and between a pint and a quart of water would run
out the end of the cable, they were that damaged that the stranding was completely filled
with water... we won't even mention the polaris butt connectors that were buried 6' down.
this is what came out the pipe. this was 750 MCM. not something you normally butt splice
in a pipe with setscrew fittings...
now, that's a gosh darn sorry install. and this one isn't looking a whole lot better. i'd have zero trust
in anything these guys touched. i'd assume it's all bad until tested.