Mustang51js
Well-known member
It has been discussed before on electrical forums I belong to it's not "alarmist tripe".
Why is it so strange for an insurance company to deny a claim from faulty diy work? Who cares if it passed inspection the inspectors miss a lot of stuff trust me on that. They don't check every splice with a wire nut or every outlet to see if the screws are tight for example. All it takes is a loose wire on an outlet and you could have a fire if it's not on a AFCI circuit. People are sneaky too they hide a lot of ****.
I doubt insurance companies are going to back people who get their knowledge from garage journal and youtubeBut I'm sure they will back a contractor that is licensed because they have the proper training. Because odds are the contractor that has been trained will result in fewer problems. Sure the pros make mistakes everyone does but it's safe to say the DIYers make more mistakes because they lack the training.
The whole business model of an insurance company is to make money not pay out claims. Why would they take a huge risk backing unqualified people doing dangerous work? Does that make financial sense to you?
I agree with this,I am a volunteer fire fighter and the insurance companies fight as hard as possible to not pay a claim,last one a space heater caught some clothes on fire which was an accident but took homeowners almost two years to get money and wasn't even close to enough to repair damage. The point of a licensed electrician is that they have to have a certain amount of insurance,if something happens that's their fault their insurance covers it. As a homeowner you just have to deal with your own insurance co and hope they will pay,and it's getting a lot tougher for that now a days. And I don't agree that you can learn everything online,most of the stuff you need experience that you can't get from reading,you need hands on. If it was so easy everyone would be an electrician.
But I'm sure they will back a contractor that is licensed because they have the proper training. Because odds are the contractor that has been trained will result in fewer problems. Sure the pros make mistakes everyone does but it's safe to say the DIYers make more mistakes because they lack the training.
