Is this right??

JonSue

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I have just had my habitation window resealed! Cost of the seal was £68 the final bill was £387 ,The chap who did it said that the window would be tight till it "Bedded in"

In fact it is impossible to shut without someone pressing really hard from ouside, so much so that Iam frightened I might snap the window fasteners! Is this right or am I being told porkies?

p.s Ive just notice there is some sort of glue stuck on the window as well. Any tips on removing it??
 
I have just had my habitation window resealed! Cost of the seal was £68 the final bill was £387 ,The chap who did it said that the window would be tight till it "Bedded in"

In fact it is impossible to shut without someone pressing really hard from ouside, so much so that Iam frightened I might snap the window fasteners! Is this right or am I being told porkies?

p.s Ive just notice there is some sort of glue stuck on the window as well. Any tips on removing it??
That’s £319 fitting charge, less materials of about £10 even if they were £20 the Mans a crook.
 
I have just had my habitation window resealed! Cost of the seal was £68 the final bill was £387 ,The chap who did it said that the window would be tight till it "Bedded in"

In fact it is impossible to shut without someone pressing really hard from ouside, so much so that Iam frightened I might snap the window fasteners! Is this right or am I being told porkies?

p.s Ive just notice there is some sort of glue stuck on the window as well. Any tips on removing it??
Take it back. You have been over charged and the repair is not suitable for the intended use it should have worked properly before you collected it. Take it back and don’t collect until you are satisfied. Or get a quote 1st from someone else then go back
 
sounds like the cowboy has fitted the wrong seal, yes you will get bitIt more resistance from a new one compared to a flattened one but take it back, it's a DIY job anyway on most van windows so he's ripped you off I think.
 
This reminds of a situation I came across many years ago.

And I am not comparing jonsue’s issue, so please don’t take offence.
Your situation is far more believable.
But this underlines what some tradesmen do to avoid blame.

I was installing an alarm system in a new home in Glasgow.
I was at the top of the stairs installing the star head detector, when I looked down. I noticed that the carpet had been fitted wrongly.
It was short by about three inches, and you could see the gripper bar.
I thought to myself the carpet fitter will be coming back to sort it out.

I happened to mention it later that day to the owner, an elderly lady, and I will never forget her reply.

THE CARPET FITTER SAID THE HALL AT THE TOP OF THE STAIRS WAS NOT SQUARE AND THIS IS WHAT CAUSED THE GAP.

I was flabbergasted, I said to my customer, homes are not built around carpets, carpets are fitted into homes, square or not. I could see that the elderly woman did not want to confront this cowboy. So I offered to pose as her son and contact him myself.

The carpet was fitted properly a few days later.
 
Was it an Irish firm doing it?

Was there a foreman standing on a scaffold shouting green side up?
We received a rash of complaints back in 98 when I visited the sites it turned out they had drives laid by cold callers, one of our wagons delivered the macadam (hence calling us), great job done, money paid.

Getting up in the morning they look outside to see all the asphalt had gone from their drives. Must have been about half a dozen of these calls. I couldn’t believe they could lift tonnes of macadam at night without the owners hearing it but they did. They made a good few thousand out of that little scam.

Some of the tricks they tried to pull in the quarry were were amazing lol. We did let they get away with an odd one or two, we had some that would come in tranny pickups and while queuing for macadam they would empty the two 45 gallon drums they carried full of water. A couple of them would be put shovelling up split stone and putting it on the pick-up. Once their macadam was ready they put that on and off they went. They never did realise they were paying macadam prices for dry stone
 

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