We bought a home last fall and had a fair amount of remodeling done on it. In the kitchen, the only remodel was refinishing the hardwood floors -- nothing else was modified.
The hardwood contractor, subcontracted by the general contractor, accessed the 220v circuit powering the double oven (and in that process disconnected the oven) to power their sander. We didn't know that happened, but when we moved in and noticed that the oven was off. We noticed there was an open panel below the oven and there were three loose wires sticking out of the wall. Suspecting they were live wires, I immediately turned off the oven circuit in the master panel. Later, the electrical contractor came in and pointed out that the h/w guys accessed the circuit (contractor confirmed it) and left it without reconnecting the oven. He put the wires back in order and when the oven turned on, the control panel started beeping with an error (F1 on Dacor).
Contractor called an oven service technician who pointed out that the error is a result of a malfunctioning circuit board in the front of the oven. He said that accessing the oven's circuit in and of itself couldn't have caused that problem, because if there was a short, the main circuit would have been fried. The general contractor has latched on to that and is telling us that the floor subcontractor is not responsible for the oven problem.
Well, the oven was working before the subcontractor accessed the circuit and left the live wires exposed -- they were in that state for two months. Meanwhile, the drawer, behind which the live wires reside, was closed, so it would have pushed the live wires against each other. When the electrical subcontractor fixed what the h/w subcontractor didn't, there is a problem with the oven.
Is there absolutely no way the front circuit board couldn't have been affected with the live wires left exposed for several weeks (and a drawer pushing against them)? I am asking the general contractor to own the problem and fix it - is that an unreasonable request, considering that they accessed the circuit and left it in that state until we discovered the problem?
The hardwood contractor, subcontracted by the general contractor, accessed the 220v circuit powering the double oven (and in that process disconnected the oven) to power their sander. We didn't know that happened, but when we moved in and noticed that the oven was off. We noticed there was an open panel below the oven and there were three loose wires sticking out of the wall. Suspecting they were live wires, I immediately turned off the oven circuit in the master panel. Later, the electrical contractor came in and pointed out that the h/w guys accessed the circuit (contractor confirmed it) and left it without reconnecting the oven. He put the wires back in order and when the oven turned on, the control panel started beeping with an error (F1 on Dacor).
Contractor called an oven service technician who pointed out that the error is a result of a malfunctioning circuit board in the front of the oven. He said that accessing the oven's circuit in and of itself couldn't have caused that problem, because if there was a short, the main circuit would have been fried. The general contractor has latched on to that and is telling us that the floor subcontractor is not responsible for the oven problem.
Well, the oven was working before the subcontractor accessed the circuit and left the live wires exposed -- they were in that state for two months. Meanwhile, the drawer, behind which the live wires reside, was closed, so it would have pushed the live wires against each other. When the electrical subcontractor fixed what the h/w subcontractor didn't, there is a problem with the oven.
Is there absolutely no way the front circuit board couldn't have been affected with the live wires left exposed for several weeks (and a drawer pushing against them)? I am asking the general contractor to own the problem and fix it - is that an unreasonable request, considering that they accessed the circuit and left it in that state until we discovered the problem?