home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!mcsun!uknet!edcastle!fofp
- From: fofp@castle.ed.ac.uk (M Holmes)
- Newsgroups: alt.peeves
- Subject: It's a gas.....
- Keywords: British Gas, Bloody Workmen, The Wrong Sort of Rubber
- Message-ID: <28423@castle.ed.ac.uk>
- Date: 19 Nov 92 17:37:09 GMT
- Distribution: alt
- Organization: Edinburgh University
- Lines: 238
-
- It all began a couple of months back when they put up scaffolding
- outside next door's windows. Of course I knew it was coming since I'd
- had to pass on a bill to the landlady.
-
- Peeve: When I pass on a bill to my landlady, she increases the rent.
-
- Anyway, the builders had arrived to fix the chimneys which had been
- letting water down inside the walls. I've already related the tale of
- the one who fell from the scaffolding.
-
- Now, I was recently off home for a funeral....
-
- Peeve: people dying. It's time they cured that.
-
- ...and when I got back I found that the gas fire in the Pool room (8 Ball
- Pool, not the murrican version with the huge pockets) and there was a
- neat little pile of rubble by it. On questioning the Flatmates, I
- discovered that the builders had been in to disconnect it due to the
- work in progress on the chimneys. A little alarm bell did ring somewhere
- way in the back of my mind: "should builders be disconnecting gas
- appliances? Isn't there something about only British Gas approved folks
- doing that?".
-
- Anyway, life continued in its current desultory fashion with roofers
- banging on the roof,....
-
- Peeve: at 8am in the bloody night.
-
- ....falling off the scaffolding, and the Pool room getting too cold to
- play Pool.
-
- Last week I got a note from the builders saying that the work on the
- chimneys was now almost complete and could I phone them to arrange to
- remove the rubble (they'd produced) from the chimneys.
-
- So I called them last Thursday to make an arrangement. They offered
- Friday Morning but wouldn't be tied to any window smaller than "between
- 9am and 12 noon".
-
- Peeve: So I had to waste half a day's leave to wait for them.
-
- And of course I waited in vain. For the workmen, they appeareth not.
- (obThought - this whole "NOT!!!" thing was in the Bible hundreds of
- years ago. Maybe it's a xtian conspiracy.)
-
- So I went in to work around 12.10pm, had lunch and then called
- Corstorphine Roofing to peeve about the non-appearance of the workmen:
-
- Me - Hello. My name is Mike Holmes and you've been fixing the roof here.
- Your people had arranged to come to clear the chimney..
-
- her - Yes, tomorrow.
-
- Me - tomorrow??
-
- her - yes, you said tomorrow on the phone.
-
- Me - no. you did and that was yesterday. Yesterday's tomorrow is today!
-
- Her - well I've got "Saturday" down in the book here.
-
- Me - <sigh> OK then, what time ON SATURDAY?
-
- Her - first thing.
-
- Me - what time is that?
-
- Her - 9am.
-
- Me <sigh> OK. 9am it is then.
-
-
- So I get up at 9am at night the next day. By 10am I figure that they're
- not coming, but I know that if I go back to bed they'll appear. I go out
- figuring that my flatmates can damn well deal with it if they appear.
-
- They don't.
-
- So on Monday, I phone again. The same woman answers and tries to tell me
- that they've been there and done the job. I explain, like I'm talking to
- some sort of idiot, that I *live* there and I can assure her that they
- have definitely not been there.
-
- The woman takes the hump and a builder picks up the phone. He asks where
- I live etc. Finally we come to an arrangement whereby *IF* he is headed
- for the flat during wednesday lunchtime, he will phone me at work, and I
- will return to let him in.
-
- This arrangement seems to go well. Two men arrive at the flat. One asks
- for a shovel and proceeds to poke around in the chimney and shovel up
- the dust and rubble created, into a plastic sack.
-
- They then connect up the gas fire and ask for squeezy liquid to test it.
- I have visions of Blue Peter and squeezy bottles and ask whether British
- Gas shouldn't be doing this. :Oh, no they reply, they'll charge you
- sixty quid".
-
- Then they decide that there's a leak at the stopcock joint they've just
- reconnected. "it's this bolt see, it's so worn that it's hard for a
- spanner to get a grip on it." I mentally note that he is not in fact
- using a spanner but is using pliers. I speculate mentally that this
- probably contributed the the hexagonal head of the bolt now appearing to
- be round.
-
- So they disconnect the fire again at the stopcock and advise me that
- I'll need to call in British Gas to fix the problem and check and
- reconnect the fire. "But don't report it as an emergency, they'll charge
- you sixty quid for that."
-
- <sigh>
-
-
-
- So I phone British gas. A woman eventually answers.
-
- Me - Hi. I'd like someone out to service a gas fire.
-
- Her - do you have a leak?
-
- Me - No.
-
- her - well what's the problem?
-
- Me - well there were roofers in and they disconnected the fire. When
- they reconected it and checked it, there was a slight leak at the joint.
- So they disconnected it again. So what I need is someone to fix the
- joint and reconnect the fire.
-
- Her - so you have a leak?
-
- Me - No. The fire leaked when reconnected, but it's disconnected now.
-
- Her - But that's a leak, we'll have to send someone out within two
- hours. Switch off the gas at the mains, open all your windows. Don't
- have any naked flames, and don't use any electrical switches.
-
- Me - I'm not at the flat.
-
- Her (peevishly) - where are you then?
-
- Me - work.
-
- her - well is there someone at the flat?
-
- Me - no.
-
- her - well someone will have to get there within two hours so that we
- can fix the leak.
-
- Me - there is *no* leak. The fire was leaking when reconnected and was
- then disconnected again.
-
- Her - well, we count that as a leak.
-
- Me - well then it's been "leaking" for two months. Look, we're
- obviously talking at cross-purposes. Let me explain again. The fire
- was disconnected by roofers. When they reconnected it.....
-
- Her - ... we are not talking at cross purposes. You have a leak. We have
- to send someone round within two hours to make it safe. It's in
- everybody's interest you know.
-
- Me (having an idea) - so, someone will come round within two hours and
- fix the fire?
-
- Her - No. They'll come and make the leak safe. Then we can make an
- appointment for someone to come round and repair the problem.
-
- Me - what I'm trying to do is get the whole thing done at once and save
- everybody a lot of trouble. If they come round and just check that it's
- switched off, I'll be in exactly the position I am now.
-
- her - well if they can fix it right away they'll do that.
-
- me - well, ok, the part that's causing the problem is the bolt in the
- stopcock.
-
- her - they don't usually bring spare parts, it's the engineers that
- order them up. They just have to make it safe.
-
- Me - <sigh> ok then. I'll be in the flat at 5.30. I'll be there until
- 6.30 and then I'm going out.
-
- Her - it has to be within two hours.
-
- Me - I won't be there within two hours. It'll have to be at 5.30.
-
- her - Right, well you call us as soon as you get back to the flat.
-
-
-
- So, at 5.30 I call. There's a card telling me not to switch on lights,
- to open all windows and to switch off the gas at the main. I compromise
- by telling my flatmate to stop cooking until the gas folks have been.
-
- The gas man arrives. I explain the problem. It gets through. He gets
- tools out and has a look at the stopcock.
-
- "There should be a little rubber ring here. Is it on the floor
- somewhere?"
-
- Me (realising what's happened) - Well, the roofers have probably
- shovelled it up, they were clearing rubble from there."
-
- him - well, that's that then.
-
- Me - can't we get another rubber washer?
-
- Him - no, it's a special sort of rubber because gas dissolves ordinary
- sorts.
-
- Me - Oh. Where will I get one then?
-
- Him - you can't, they don't come seperately. You'll have to have a whole
- new stopcock fitted.
-
- Me - <sigh> figures.
-
- Him - If they weren't plumbers then they shouldn't have been messing
- around with gas equipment anyway.
-
- Me - <sigh> figures.
-
-
- So then he roots around in the chimney and starts worrying about the
- volume of it or something. Then he worries that the chimney space isn't
- sealed and starts tearing panels out of the wall to check. Eventually,
- he concludes that it'll mostly do, "but we'll have to chop out some of
- the skirting board when we come back..."
-
-
-
- The adventure continues...........
-
- --
-
- I wonder how long it will be before the Church of England will accept
- AI's as Priests...
-