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- 08-26-2007 08:51 PM #11
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It really depends on the person going out to disconnect the Comcast Cable. Most of the installers cut it at the pole and leave it at that, where as others want to cause a problem and will mess with your Dish.
About 5 years ago I had this happen to a customer of mine where the Comcast guy cut it in 5 different places to cause me a problem.
I went back out there, fixed everything and then presented the customer with a bill for $199 for a re-installation.
Never collected a dime from the customer, but gave her the bill and told her if she collects from Comcast give me $100 and keep the other $100 for her troubles.
Little retired old lady has nothing better to do with her time, complained to the public utility commission and a few other places and managed to make Comcast PAY!
Comcast then went back and charged back their contractor, and I got a nasty call from one of the managers trying to justify the $199bill he just had to pay.
Contractor:
Im calling to try to justify a $199 service call for a cut cable line
My Responce:
The service call was Free, the $199 was for "Emergency Service" because I had to go out there the same day to fix it.
His reply back:
She could have waited a few days, like everyone else.
My Reply:
Why should she have to be without Tv, when it was your idiot installer who intentionally cut the line in 5 different places!
His reply:
Called me some nasty names and hung up
Meanwhile, about 3 weeks later the customer came in and gave me a nice new $100 bill
- 08-26-2007 08:51 PM # ADS
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- 08-26-2007 08:58 PM #12
Sometimes, if the cable going to the house is an aerial drop, I take the cable off the house and bundle it an wrap it around the pole, when I do a satellite install.
- 08-26-2007 08:59 PM #13
See this...
http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Cable/Informal/cblwirng.txt
Once you cancel cable service, the cable company can charge you on a per foot basis for all the interior wiring. If after presenting you an option to pay, and you refuse they then have 30 days to remove all the wiring and must repair any damages they made installing the wiring.
Seeing that they are required to repair all the damages made by the cable, nobody is going to take that liability and get into a pissing match with the customer over it, so the wiring is simply left abandoned!
- 08-26-2007 09:01 PM #14
Oh, I agree that the tech was wrong for cutting the line. No doubt about that. But why not have a nice fresh new cable run for no extra cost when given the chance?
Most techs from any service will try to get you to let them use the existing line for the simple fact that they are getting paid (often the same amount) either way, whether they crawl in your attic for a new run or use what is already in place. I say no, I want a new run. Why chance it? Look at the other story about the person getting satellite and then going back to Comcast for Internet two years later. If they had a new run done by Satellite then they wouldn't have the problem of Comcast taking back the lines that once carried their cable TV signal.
- 08-26-2007 09:25 PM #15
I tell alot of my customers who want all new lines run, is to simply remove the old lines before the technician shows up.
This way the technician is forced to run all new lines and there is no arguement over it with the installer.
Many installers do not like it when customers insist they run all new lines, because they say they are creating more work for them, but you know what the technicians get paid to run all new lines anyways if they are already existing or not!
As far as the story about the lady with Comcast internet, thats due to a lazy comcast installer. Its not the fault of the satellite installer since they where abandoned by comcast when the customer cancelled service with them a few years prior.
If you want to hear something really screwey, consider this. I did a Job for a customer about 3 years ago and she had existing RG59 ran inside her walls with comcast cable. My technician had no choice but to use the RG59 because it was behind the drywall and this lady did not want any holes drilled through the exterior of the house.
So we complete the install with no problems, however 2 weeks later the customer calls us claiming a signal loss issue and wanted to cancel service. I went over there, didn't find a signal loss issue with the RG59, but just because this lady was making a big stink over this, I spent an entire day and re-fished all her walls, and installed brand new home run RG6 cables.
When this lady called to cancel, we got into a big arguement over the cancellation fees and I finally told her you let me come fix this and make things right, or I was charging her to take the system out. She kept the service for 1 year like I required, but I must have really pissed her off because after her contract was over she cancelled and went back to Comcast.
I then get a really nasty call from this lady because the Comcast guy refuses to install the cable using the lines I installed and wanted to charge her like $400 to re-fish all her walls and run new wiring. The kicker was that she expected me to pay it after what I put her through over the cancellation fees. Then she threatened to take me to court.
I was like Lady, have the installer remove the DP34 switch, install a new 4-way splitter where I got all your cables home ran and enjoy your comcast cable
Not for anything, wall fishing is custom labor and I should have charged her. I upgraded all the cable in her home for FREE to prevent her from cancelling and then she calls me up like I did it to prevent her from going back to cable.Last edited by Claude Greiner; 08-26-2007 at 09:41 PM.
- 08-26-2007 10:14 PM #16
I am a nice guy. Even though I am a douche by making them do their job and run a new line, I am not picky about how it looks. If they want to run it along the outside of the wall, drill through the wall, do this, that or the other thing, fine, I just want the new line. Certain things aren't reasonable requests, like you mentioned in your post with that old bitty.
- 09-04-2007 01:52 PM #17
SatelliteGuys Regular
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- Sep 3rd, 2007
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newbie here - I'm having D* installed for TV this saturday (one HD and one non HD) and keeping Comcast for Internet and Telephone. The longest line run is for the upstairs bedroom - comcast went in basement wall - length of basement - outside and up to the bedroom - installed a coax jack in the bedroom - this is the standard def TV - is that RG59 cable usually? Do I need RG6 for this TV do you guys think? Does it make a difference with a standard def TV? I have read the posts - I would actually prefer they use the existing line for the bedroom - seems easier for everyone and if the quality is fine then I'm ok with it. For the HD TV - I will request the RG6 and that's a short run into basement and directly up through floor (hole already there).
- 09-15-2007 07:19 PM #18
SatelliteGuys Junkie
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My take is, if I am installing all new stuff, I'm not touching your old stuff at all. This means all new holes. It makes it easier if it ends up that the CSR or dealers sales rep took a crap on you to meet quota and promised something untrue to the customer, and they balk at activation.

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