signal7:
I even know a guy that paid an electrician to replace a ceiling fan - and the job was so simple I thought paying someone to do it was a bit ridiculous.
A former co-worker's neighbour would not agree.
He installed a ceiling fan himself. The house caught
fire. The investigation confirmed that the cause of the
fire was the ceiling fan installation. Insurance was denied.
I pulled a permit for installing my ceiling fans, and stood
an inspection. The key requirement was that the fan
be attached to a code brace and utility box, not the
general purpose handy box used for a ceiling light.
(Which I had to remove, greatly complicating the work).
Those code approved brackets were sold along side the
ceiling fans, at our local Home Despot.
signal7:
In essence, you have to be competent enough in your work to comply with local electrical codes and you have to take precautions to ensure that a failure won’t result in a hazardous situation. If you can confidently do those two things, nothing is standing in your way, imho.
Agreed. We are stifled by too many
Nanny Laws as it is. Besides, nothing clears your own
judgement and builds character like a house fire…