Fulthrotl
~Autocorrect is My Worst Enema.~
- Occupation
- E
I think I would hate doing electrical work if I ran into it that often.
For us, I think it has a lot to do with several factors as to why it's so rare. The majority of our housing boom ended in the mid 60's and by the 1970's the majority of buildable land in the suburbs had been eaten up with tracts. We didn't have a lot of new housing going up after that and has been steadily declining ever since. But, even when I run into housing from the AL time period, most homes are still wired with copper. If I had to put my best guess on it, it would have to do with ultra skeptical New Englanders who are hesitant to try new products. I'm sure AL was viewed with heavy skepticism like most new products are here.
it was a west coast thing, a manufactured house thing, and yeah, most of your residential
was done by the time it arrived.
ours was in it's boom time. mid 60's to mid 80's. during the late '70's, a local shop here
had 300 electricians wiring nothing but tract housing. union sparkies, no less, and that shop
bought aluminum romex by the train car full. 500 unit tracts were common.
what really drove it here, was the overall package of housing was, and remains, absurd.
my itty bitty tract house, 1,700 sq. ft. sold new in 1962 for $19,000. one up the street,
without a pool, is currently in escrow at $790,000. and prices are still climbing. we bought
at the absolute peak of the bubble, closing on 05/05/05 at $710,000. doubted it would reach
that again. it's well past it.
now, the boom in housing, and early spikes in prices on the left coast, led to a number of
people championing aluminum wire to save costs. i think, about '78 or so, it saved $75 per
house in costs. and left us with hundreds of thousands of houses here, wired with poo.
i first took a look at niche marketing this, with the copalum thing, back in 1991. nobody would
pay to fix it properly then, nobody will pay for it now.
what'll drive fixing it properly, or in some fashion, is when the insurance companies won't underwrite
policies for aluminum wired houses unless it's fixed with a certified repair. no, insurance, no
close of escrow.
the hot way to market it would be to get in with realtors, and do the houses when they get sold.
but, getting a realtor to push "infrastructure" isn't going to happen, ever. not without legislation.