Results 16 to 30 of 32
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16th February 2007, 12:42 AM #16Senior Member
- Join Date
- Oct 2006
- Location
- australia
- Posts
- 175
okay I will pay it.
It is a really good deal, much cheaper then the other quotes and he said he can do it right away, have it completed by next Friday.
Didn't think I was being a tight ass, paying him on completion.
It isn't funny how many tradies have stuffed us around. Guess I am paranoid now, whereas before I wouldn't have even thought twice about it.
He quoted me $1200 but hasn't given me a written quote. Now what do I ask for in a written contract to be super careful?
Time
Cost
Description of job
Required 50% deposit
Anything else?
Are all hinges these days the self-locking ones? Or do I need to double check?
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16th February 2007, 01:03 AM #17.
- Join Date
- Jul 2005
- Location
- Victoria
- Posts
- 0
Im always carefull when its a good deal, much cheaper and can be done straight away. Most furniture makers have a lead time of 8 - 12 weeks if their any good and have a plentifull supply of work
dont stress i was just having a friendly dig
I just give a verbal quote and then when they agree the work will go ahead then get a written quote. Generaly its all layed out on the invoice they get when the deposit is payed.
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16th February 2007, 04:27 AM #18SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- Apr 2005
- Location
- Sydney
- Age
- 64
- Posts
- 882
I had to pay a big deposit on the glass I recently ordered for my doors. They seemed like a reputable company and they knew their business. I had a good gut feeling so I just payed the whole lot. I've got no complaints at all with the glass or their prompt delivery.
I also had a slightly nervous situation as a builder once. I signed a contract for a $50,000 job with virtually just a bit of coin to my name and no line of credit organised. I got the ten percent deposit which paid for my materials, and I signed up some subbies on no deposit. Needless to say I worked up a sweat pulling long hours trying to get to my first progress claim so I'd have something to pay the boys with.
Everything went very smoothly and I made a tidy profit on the job, but it was a bit of a risk I took there.
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16th February 2007, 08:07 AM #19
John I know that feeling well! Then you get the client that decides to jerk you around and the whole thing comes unstuck!
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16th February 2007, 08:14 AM #20
you really should be getting a detailed written quotation before you pay the contractor anything ,so that BOTH of you know what is entailed in the job ,by detailed i mean all work and material types that will be used in the job as well as payment shedules ,read it and make any changes you may have on the original both sign and date it then copy it and both have a copy on file just in case something goes wrong ,nothing may but because you are both aware of the other having a signed copy this will give a bit of assurance that nothing can go wrong
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16th February 2007, 03:34 PM #21SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- Apr 2005
- Location
- Sydney
- Age
- 64
- Posts
- 882
Yes, that's the only thing that concerned me. I had every confidence that I could do the job properly and run the job from claim to claim, but you can't foretell if you're going to get jerked around, as is often the case.
I've found that the richer a client, the more likely they are to jerk you around. Especially with the final payment, since they've got what they wanted then.
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16th February 2007, 04:36 PM #22
Thats why I haven't done a domestic job for over 10 years. and I usually won't go near builders with the proverbial 10' pole. Local government was the only work I'd do (with some private corporation work)
Unfortunately I am coming off a five year hiatus of doing the home dad thing - with some sporadic consulting project management in between - so its back to working for Dodgy Bros. builders again.
I feel like i'm starting out from scratch again, but It won't take long to get back to the feed trough.
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16th February 2007, 09:13 PM #23Senior Member
- Join Date
- Mar 2004
- Location
- Melbourne
- Age
- 58
- Posts
- 86
For any cabinet work i do, its 50% down 30% on delivery and 20% on completion. If they havent got the 30% when i come to deliver the goods stay in the van.
Have been burnt several times now by non payers.
But then i accepted a good paying contract job so the cabinet making will be now done evenings and weekends just to keep the business going just in case
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17th February 2007, 12:12 AM #24Senior Member
- Join Date
- Oct 2006
- Location
- australia
- Posts
- 175
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17th February 2007, 12:17 AM #25Senior Member
- Join Date
- Oct 2006
- Location
- australia
- Posts
- 175
Guy can you tell me what type of wood cabinets are made in... are they all done in the same type? Or are there some dodgy materials out there I should be aware of?
I can't work out why this guy has quoted me such a cheap price, when all the others are upwards of $1000.
This is the one we are replacing:
There will be smaller doors up top. Not paying extra for a colour, just going with the standard white doors.
He quoted me $1000 for the carcass and full length doors. With the 3 draws and smaller doors at the top it is $1200.
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19th February 2007, 12:54 AM #26
Yeh that looks about right. That is about what I would charge if I did the job myself. The people charging more probably are doing so as there isn't a hell of a lot of money in the smaller jobs. Just looking at it rom what you have shown it would come in at around 500 bucks for the carcass for the board. The doors and drw fts maybe a little more fr the board and maybe 150 bucks. Th drawers would proly be another 40 bucks or so depending on wheter they use dcent drawers or not then you gotta allow maybe 6 hours labour @ around 65 bucks an hour which wouldbe 390 and then GST on top of that comes in at 1188 so yeh 1200 is about right.
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20th February 2007, 01:00 AM #27Senior Member
- Join Date
- Oct 2006
- Location
- australia
- Posts
- 175
Woot! Thankyou so much Cabbie.
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20th February 2007, 07:49 AM #28
No probs I skimped a little on the labour though just thinking about it. I never allowed for if there may have been a problem with the walls or something when they go to install maybe an extra 2 hours which aint much still anyways Not a big or difficult job and a decent price too in my opinion.
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20th February 2007, 08:24 AM #29
are you going to paint the interior white to make it brighter inside? Just looking at the whole thing, what's wrong with the frame that's there? You could paint it nicely and get some doors made to hang off it, then fit out the interior as you want.
Steve
Kilmore (Melbourne-ish)
Australia
....catchy phrase here
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7th March 2007, 03:15 AM #30
The State Government of Victoria Law says that, upto $20K you may ask for a 10% deposit, anything over $20K you may only ask for a 5% deposit 'before' starting a job. Listen to those words carefully. Whomever asks for more than the Law states, could be in very serious trouble with the Law if found out. Breaking this law actualy means commiting a criminal offence.
You should also be supplied with a contract stating exactly what you are being made and a schedule of payments.
Hope this helps
T
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