Danny Jo
Well-Known Member
[ QUOTE ]
. . . So no, he is not ripping you off - he is simply covering his back. You asked him if it was OK. No its not, but he simply can not say its OK to botch it, even if it is.
In other words: ask a professional, you will get the professionals answer with built in liability clauses. Ask an amateur, and you will probably get away with it. No liability accepted for my advice of course - I am just an amateur!
[/ QUOTE ] I think it is a bit unfair to tar all professionals with the same brush (that of an excessively defensive pursuit of zero risk to themselves).
Before I decided that Freestyle was the boat for me, I went over her as I imagined that a surveyor would, and discovered a number of signs on which I needed reassurance before going ahead with the purchase. I also needed a survey for insurance purposes, but experience with house surveyors had taught me that what makes a surveyor worth his salt is the will and ability to distinguish the trivial from the serious. A surveyor who is concerned only with covering his back can be worse than useless, particularly if he or she produces a report that obliges you to undertake expensive work an account of a problem that a more experienced surveyor might dismiss as cosmetic.
I'll give one example - my pre-purchase inspection of Freestyle in 2005 revealed this apparent sign of movement between the leading edge of the keel and the hull:
I mentioned this and other concerns to a surveyor chosen on the basis of his reputation as a man of judgement. I was pleased to see that these concerns were specifically addressed in his report. He did not see any problem with the keel and its fastenings. Moreover, when I pressed the question further, asking "shouldn't I get some of the bolts removed to check for corrosion", he answered to the effect that I could if I wished, but he wouldn't recommend it.
That in my view is what professional advisers are for - to use their experience and knowledge to make the kind of risk assessment one would make for oneself if one had the same experience and knowledge.
. . . So no, he is not ripping you off - he is simply covering his back. You asked him if it was OK. No its not, but he simply can not say its OK to botch it, even if it is.
In other words: ask a professional, you will get the professionals answer with built in liability clauses. Ask an amateur, and you will probably get away with it. No liability accepted for my advice of course - I am just an amateur!
[/ QUOTE ] I think it is a bit unfair to tar all professionals with the same brush (that of an excessively defensive pursuit of zero risk to themselves).
Before I decided that Freestyle was the boat for me, I went over her as I imagined that a surveyor would, and discovered a number of signs on which I needed reassurance before going ahead with the purchase. I also needed a survey for insurance purposes, but experience with house surveyors had taught me that what makes a surveyor worth his salt is the will and ability to distinguish the trivial from the serious. A surveyor who is concerned only with covering his back can be worse than useless, particularly if he or she produces a report that obliges you to undertake expensive work an account of a problem that a more experienced surveyor might dismiss as cosmetic.
I'll give one example - my pre-purchase inspection of Freestyle in 2005 revealed this apparent sign of movement between the leading edge of the keel and the hull:
I mentioned this and other concerns to a surveyor chosen on the basis of his reputation as a man of judgement. I was pleased to see that these concerns were specifically addressed in his report. He did not see any problem with the keel and its fastenings. Moreover, when I pressed the question further, asking "shouldn't I get some of the bolts removed to check for corrosion", he answered to the effect that I could if I wished, but he wouldn't recommend it.
That in my view is what professional advisers are for - to use their experience and knowledge to make the kind of risk assessment one would make for oneself if one had the same experience and knowledge.