Brivis Online Service Booking
My gas central heating recently developed an intermittent fault which meant it would work sometimes and then not work at all. Given the cold temperatures we are having I contacted Brivis who said the earliest I could expect someone would be in four days. Someone did turn up on friday and spent about 10 minutes in my ceiling saying he had “realigned” something and went to get his invoice book. At $175 I at least was pleased that I had reliable heating again. It lasted about 24 hours then died completely.
It now has a new noise when it is switched on.After an uncomfortable weekend, not able to be home much, I called them (suprisingly calmly) this morning and explained the situation. They then told me the earliest they could get someone out would be next Monday.
I explained to them that this is Canberra, it has snowed in places and a week is far too long to wait for a technician to fix something that should have been fixed the first time. I was advised to “cross your fingers for a cancellation”.When I asked for an assurance that there wouldn’t be a further call out charge, I was told “it depends on whether he has to fix something new”. Given that nothing was fixed the first time, and it now has more problems, it is inevitable my heater will need “something new” fixed.I don’t think I am being unreasonable in expecting a technician to come back within a couple of days and I am not prepared to pay a further call out charge. Do any RiotACTers know of any consumer affairs legislation or other information that I can arm myself with if I call Brivis back and get antsy? Is heating considered an “essential service”?Any advice would be welcome. Our Brivis MPS was installed in June 2007 and worked fine for many years. We had it serviced every second year (Brivis’s recommendation at the time) until we had a fault with it.
From that year on, it has been a bitch of a unit.Three or four years ago, we had it serviced. But then a few weeks later on a Fri night, my wife thought she heard a bang in the night.
Ignored it and went back to sleep. Woke up before 8am and could smell gas. We looked at the Networker control and it showed fan working but errors showing.
Opened the back door (heater underneath back deck) and gas spell was awful. Run around front of house and threw gas lever to off. Switched electrical mains off.
Went back to heater and turned power switch off.Went back inside and opened all doors and windows. Told wife that despite it being -5C that morning, we were not using electricity at all until the gas smell left the house.Some weeks later, the Brivis techo could finally fit us in.
Different techo from the service guy. Eventually he stopped inspecting the unit and came inside to speak to us. He attempted to yell at us about not having the unit serviced – because the gas hose was perishing (had perished, gas had leaked out, exploded, and punched a hole through heat exchanger so unburnt gas was being blown into house) and a service would have picked that up and replaced it. Showed him the sheet from the service from Brivis a few weeks earlier.
He said Sorry, you have done the right thing, Brivis will pay for all the repairs. They sent us bills for those repairs – we faxed them copies of the worksheets and politely asked if they wanted to sit down with us and consumer affairs folks as mediators to work through it. They wisely did not respond and we never heard from the Brivis debt collectors again.Since then, every year either the “low” or the “high” board fails and so we have at least 1 week each winter without central heating. When my heater was new (back in 2001) it took Brivis 5 attempts to fix it properly. Each time there was a 5 day wait and of course had to take time off work to wait for them to arrive. Luckily it was a waranty job, but still not happy jan.In regards to the OP I sure the hell wouldn’t be paying someone a 2nd time to come out.
Let them do their thing then send them on their way. To me they miss diagnosed your fault the first time, so you have paid for something you didn’t need.
If they carry on take em to consumer affairs, or what ever they are called now days. Even the threat of that can make companies back down. RuffnReady said:Poor service undoubtedly, but how soft are you people?
I live largely without heating – put on an extra jumper and snuggle under a blanket!I don’t consider myself soft. However, after a few days (depending on the insulation of the house) of no heating the inside of a home levels off at the outside temperature.
Brivis Online Service Booking Software
If you ever had an outside toilet, like I did growing up, you will understand how uncomfortable going to the loo can be in this situation.Also, we have a toddler who tends to roll out of her covers. We couldn’t very well have her sleeping in a snowsuit to prevent her from freezing.Being colder than you want is no fun at all. I also had my heater break down this winter. I have a Pyrox system and it was just over 3 years old. Just out of warranty (3yrs + 1mth) and so I called someone from the Yellow pages. Turns out I needed a major part and had to go to the manufacturer for repair.
We had to wait around 6 weeks before it was repaired. During this time the whole family spent all of our time at home in the one room we could heat using an old column heater I borrowed from a friend. The kids thought it was fun camping in the living room, needless to say I didn’t think it was so great.Just a thought. If the fault is intermittent it may be that the outlet for condensed water may be blocked, if this is the case then the heater will trip as the water builds up to prevent shorting. Then as the water evaporates it will work again for a while until the condensation backs up.Good luck and try to keep warm.
I had a similar experience with Brivis, our heater- about 9 years old started backfiring, i called the brivis call centre (interstate) and arranged for a tech to have a look. They could not give an exact time just 8 – 1 or 1-5 on a particular day.The first day they never turned up so i called and rescheduled, they came and quoted $600 for a rebuild and ordered the parts, weeks went by with no contact, so I got another gas tech out of the yellow pages to have a look, he said the burner assembly was cactus, but it should be under the warranty (10 years for the burner unit), but only brivis would be able to fix under warranty.So another call to the brivis prople, another appointment – that they never arrived, another wasted day from work.
Square’s provide a variety of ways for your clients to book with you. Your Booking Site is a free website your clients can access if you don’t have one of your own. You can also embed a booking widget or button on your existing website, or add a booking button to your email so clients can easily request appointments based on your availability.Staff and services visible for online booking can be managed from the or sections of your online Appointments dashboard, or you can override these settings with. Your Booking Site URLShare the URL provided in the Online Booking tab of your or invite your clients via email and social media to give them immediate access to your booking site. If you’re managing multiple locations, each location will have a unique booking URL and set up page that can be viewed by switching locations from the Online Booking tab.The business information reflected in your online booking site can be edited from the Locations section of your. And can be edited from your dashboard.
Customized Booking Site URLAlthough you’re not able to customize your online booking site URL with Square Appointments, several third parties offer this service. Here are a few popular companies to help you get started:.Create a Booking ButtonAdd a booking button to your website or your email signature. The button will take your clients to your Booking Site.
Log in to your Click Online Booking. If managing multiple locations, select a location from the dropdown menu on the top left. Customize your button or leave it blank to show the blue default “Book an Appointment” text.To add the button to your website: Add the HTML to the code for your page or use your website builder’s tool for adding HTML code.To add the button to an email signature: Either add the code to your email signature or right click the button preview, copy it, and paste it into your signature.