motorradsilke
2023-04-13 10:32:39
- #1
You are the one who usually argues that as a layperson, you should best not touch an outlet. A professional company was hired here to install proper and professional electrical work, and the gentleman not only did not use his level, but not even his rough eye measurement. The guidelines on how to lay cables are not there for nothing, because in 2-3 years no one remembers where the cables are or the house changes owners and then you look where the outlets are and where you can safely hang your pictures or screw in the shelf. And no one then thinks that in a new building the electrical work was installed as if the gentleman had been at the fair the night before and not slept at all.
Today I was looking for our 6-year-old electrical wiring in the walls because we are getting new interior plaster and I want to mark the cables for the plasterers. And I'm glad that most people had the thing with horizontal and vertical straight because otherwise I would have to search randomly inside the walls – because even after so few years I no longer know exactly where what was.
I photographed everything when it was installed.
If we had looked at the photos during the kitchen construction, we would have saved ourselves 2 hours of work.