I don't know how that installer bills?Maine Sail would be the best qualified to make any real judgement. There is one hell of a number of boats that have sunk by less than professional repair jobs.
the guidelines are portal to portal in most jobs that entail travel time.......as they say its hard but its fairI don't know how that installer bills?
*Does he charge for travel time?
*Does he bill it by partial days? (some guys do)
*Does he charge for the time he takes to get the parts needed?
*Does he bill by the "total hours" it took to do the job including travel, chandlery etc.?
I can't imagine it took 7 hours to install a new bilge switch and float and run the wires on a C-30 but depending upon wire chases, how and where he cut in the new switch, travel time, a trip to the chandlery etc. the bill may or may not be out of line? If the guy is independent and travels the time for a guy to come out to the boat and fix it does not start when he actually starts working on the boat itself.
I had 2.5 hours on Monday alone running around for hard to find parts that no one would normally stock. Calls on Saturday confirmed that two local suppliers had what I needed. Turns out they did not. This entailed a 45 minute drive each way to another supplier who actually did have what I needed. Who pays for that? Am I supposed to eat that time? Donate it for free? I did my best to "confirm stock" at two local sources who were both wrong about their inventory.
At least when I send a customer a bill he got 5 hours out of me, for a 5 hour bill, and I charge a LOT less than the local car dealer. When you go to the car dealer they charge you "flat rate".. Last time I had my car into the dealer I paid for 6.5 hours of labor while I "waited" for the car. It was done in 1:45........
Here is how last Monday went:
*Leave shop at 7:00 am and spend 2.5 hours finding parts for the job. (two suppliers had said *parts were in stock, and they were NOT $hit happens)
*Drive to club, load tools from car to dock cart walk down to dock to wait for the launch, launch to boat & unload tools 45 minutes
*Dig into job and do physical work on the boat 5 hours
*Call launch, wait, load tools and get back to shop .75 hours
Total 9 hours
How much is fair to charge this customer in terms of hours??? The entire "job" from the time I left my shop to the time I got back to the shop took 9 hours...? I did nothing else that day but his boat.. Is 9 hours fair? The physical time working on the boat was 5 hours but the ancillary realities of the job ate another 4.
I had a Hunter that it took me 6 hours just to run the flux gate wires. Damn pan built boats..Owner was on-board the entire time. I was glad he was and saw what the job really entailed........
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Sometimes other sailors will volunteer and do it for you, and teach you, right on the spot....and also ask around with other sailors for recommendations.
Another consideration is "taking your Chevy to the Maserati dealer for a simple repair". You had the boat fixed in a big boats/big bucks neighborhood - if not on your Catalina 30 at $100 an hour the tech would have been on one of the many really expensive boats where a $700 bill gets lost under "misc".Well. Just got the bill yesterday. 7 hours labor, $40 in parts for a total of $702!!!!!! Ouch.
Besides that, you did a good deed. Money doesn't serve any purpose until it's in circulation. Somebody was probably buying drinks all around based on their profitable day. Your money could be helping a local establishment stay in business and providing tip earnings for somebody who really needs it. Cheer up!Another consideration is "taking your Chevy to the Maserati dealer for a simple repair". You had the boat fixed in a big boats/big bucks neighborhood - if not on your Catalina 30 at $100 an hour the tech would have been on one of the many really expensive boats where a $700 bill gets lost under "misc".
Don't let the wires ( or diesel, fiberglass, rigging etc) intimidate you, lots of information and great advice is available to make you comfortable with DIY or at least be an educated consumer with an idea of fair pricing and when you need to call on the pro.
Besides, it was less than a "boat buck", chalk it up to your continuing education.....
A good way to look at supporting the local economy...Besides that, you did a good deed. Money doesn't serve any purpose until it's in circulation. Somebody was probably buying drinks all around based on their profitable day. Your money could be helping a local establishment stay in business and providing tip earnings for somebody who really needs it. Cheer up!
Scott,Besides that, you did a good deed. Money doesn't serve any purpose until it's in circulation. Somebody was probably buying drinks all around based on their profitable day. Your money could be helping a local establishment stay in business and providing tip earnings for somebody who really needs it. Cheer up!