If install was done by a Dish Network employee, they alway check within a couple of days, does not happen when subcontractor is used.
If you believe that, I have some good land to sell you down in the Everglades. Our 'friendly' QAS has been quoted as saying, they are not required to QAS in-house jobs, but of the subcontractor jobs they QC, they have to fail a minimum of 40% each month. If he cannot find something obvious outside, say a Digicon fitting, or unapproved cable, he will dig deeper to find an unapproved barrel in the line or wallplate, or a crimp-on fitting behind the wall plate. He will even fail a job if the instruction manual is left laying on top of the rcvr, citing Dish's specifications that 3" of clearance is necessary on all sides of the rcvr. (Even though 722k rcvrs have no air vents on top of them) The QAS team has become a money-generating sector of Dish's total revenue. Every job that can be installed without having to pay a dime for it, results in profits for Dish. We've seen QAS teams in our area increase dramatically over the last year. Even to the point where when in-house techs have light work, their FSM's instruct them to QC subcontractor jobs.
'Quality' has very little to do with the visit. The overwhelming majority of techs doing this work are doing great, quality work. But when your QAS fails a guys job because stickers on the remote are not straight or both turned the same way, that's very sad. Dish will not pay the contractor for the job, and in turn the contractor will not pay the subcontractor/technician who did the job. So a tech will spend hours of time and lots of materials to complete your job, only for Dish to come behind him and say, "your stickers are crooked, we're not paying". "the center conductor is sticking out of the end of fitting the width of two nickels, not one nickel, we're not paying" and on and on. Our guys have failed install after install after install for the most menial issues. And out of 60 failed installations from March of this year, 2 have come back as trouble calls after 60 days due to customer's children changing tv channel and a bad rcvr. But according to Dish's quality standards, all 60 of those jobs were substandard and in immediate danger of causing service interruptions for the customers. It all sounds like a shakedown to me.