celtic said:![]()
...pretty much sums it up.
so...the EC should've had a sandwich and let the LV contractor install the voice and data lines?
Now, I'm hungry too...
celtic said:![]()
...pretty much sums it up.
Yeah, fair is fair. If the low voltage contractor wants to hand out grilled cheese sandwiches to the electrical contractor, he can have the work.emahler said:so...the EC should've had a sandwich and let the LV contractor install the voice and data lines?
Now, I'm hungry too...
LawnGuyLandSparky said:All voice & Data wiring should be done by electricians, since it is electrical work. There should be no such thing as "Data-com" shops. In the example you gave, it's clear the homeowner never communicated the system requirements to the EC or the GC.
celtic said:"Real knowledge is to know the extent of one's ignorance."
Minuteman said:Cat5 / Cat6 and Fiber Optics make up about a forth of our work. It all pays.
I'm not saying that it's okay for anybody to do work that they aren't qualified to do.mkoloj said:Electrical work makes up 100% of some trunk slammers work and it pays them too.
Does that make it ok in your book for them to do the work if they aren't qualified?
hbiss said:I don't think it's funny at all gentlemen. You can laugh it off, scoff at it and spin it all you want. Fact of the matter is, no matter how you cut it many ECs are no more competant to do voice and data than the common DIYer. DIYers usually do the work for themselves, unfortunately incompetant ECs win the confidance of their customer and take their money for the privilege.
This is a big problem and not at all limited to a few isolated instances. I know that there are some ECs out there who do a fine job and personally I don't care who does LV wiring as long as it's done right. But if you are too lazy, don't care or are too mentally challenged to learn how to install these systems properly stay out of it. You are only giving the trade a black eye.
-Hal
hbiss said:In the example you gave, it's clear the homeowner never communicated the system requirements to the EC or the GC.
What??? Are you trying to tell me that SOMEBODY has to tell an EC that telephone and data wiring DOESN'T get looped?? Are you trying to tell me that the homeowner needs to tell the EC that there is a color code??
All voice & Data wiring should be done by electricians, since it is electrical work.
Yup, that's exactly the attitude that contributed to this mess. "I'm supposed to do it so I'm doing it". Doesn't matter that the EC doesn't have any idea how. Hey, if something goes wrong I'll just spin it and say nobody communicated the system requirements to me. Yeah right.
-Hal
I agree with emahler's comment - there's poetic justice in there somewhere. If the guy somehow gets it to magically work, then peachy. I think we know that won't happen.hbiss said:Homer convinces the customer that we don't know what we are talking about and that maybe he should hire the sparky who wired the house to install the system.
Well, if nothing was said to the EC but "phone and data in every room", then something far different would have been installed, IMO. I can't imagine anyone competent saying, "Well, I don't know what that means, so I'll just loop everything like POTS phones..."Lawnguy said:When a customer requests a nonstandard extra but does not specify boo about the particulars, neither an EC nor a "datacom Con" is likely to get anything right.
mkoloj said:I have seen low end production housing with home runs for the tele\data wiring, if he only did it for the voice maybe he could get away with saying he wasn't informed of what was necessary but when the data is looped he is clearly not qualified to do the work and anyone that says he was not informed is full of![]()
IMO tele\data is a niche of the electrical field and needs specialized knowledge when dealing with complex installs.
The old saying "Jack of all trades and a master of none." comes to mind when thinking about this.
There are some EC's that should not touch tele\data work and other EC's that have tele\data divisions that employ the masters of that niche of the field and perform flawless work.
The sparky that did the tele\data wiring in a 6000 sq. ft. custom home as described by Hbiss clearly has no business near dial tone just like a residential electrician has no business wiring up a POCO sub-station.
Learning on the customer's dime about something you have no clue about is called being a hack in my book and IMO is no better than the "trunk slammers" I sometimes hear sparkies talking about on this site.
Just because it is has to do with wires does not make it every electrician's specialty.
If the EC that did the wiring gets called in to install the phone system I would love to hear the lines they use to talk the customer out of the fancy phone system.
Or will he show up with this system to replace that "piece of junk":
![]()
and impress the customer with his "Skillz".
That would have worked if the staple gun had been correct(or correctly used), I believe. I wonder if the EC ran the RG6QS as well, and if he looped THAT?.georgestolz said:But I would simply use a different color sheathing for data and HR everything back to the basement, given no further instruction beyond "PH/Data every room." - And I don't consider myself half as qualified as Hal. But unless I were to be told something different, that's what they'd get, without specifics.
LawnGuyLandSparky said:And if in a low-end production home, the developer asked for 2 data loops, because his "package" offers the HO ONE data port for each floor, and paid the EC accordingly, then a series of boxes and two cat 5 or 6e is what you get. It is not up to the subcontractor to give the work and the material away because it makes for a better job. If a HO or a GC or developer wants the home(s) wired as small offices or trading floors, he/she/they cannot expect that to automatically happen by saying "I want 2-phone lines in every room and data."
There is absolutely NOTHING complex about any tele/data install that cannot be taught to just about anyone in a matter of moments. There isn't a electrician alive that doesn't understand "2 separate dedicated homeruns of cat 5 to one central point from each port."
Does "Fractionalized McJob" ring any bells either?
And just because those wires are small, doesn't mean they require (excuse me if you can hear me LOL) "masters of that niche" to effect a proper install. BTW how long does it take, on average, to "master" the art of cat 5 cabling? IS it one or two days?![]()
Please note that for all we know, the builder of this "Custom home" (which seems to be the designation given to any non-tract house) hired the worst, or cheapest (not necessarily the same) EC he could find. And for sure, we won't ever know how the lines of communication broke down, or if any even existed. In no way should one incident be used to determine the overall ability of an entire trade to lace a structure with silly string.