IronMike Posted November 23, 2022 Share Posted November 23, 2022 (edited) Hi When these are delivered, is it industry standard for the supplier to also help load these onto the new build? Had a delivery with driver refusing to load on the roof trusses. This after a month delay in delivery. Means I will have to hire a crane. As you can imagine I am very disappointed with the lack of service. Any advice appreciated. Cheers Edited November 23, 2022 by IronMike Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
joe90 Posted November 23, 2022 Share Posted November 23, 2022 No it’s not, in fact you may have to unload the lorry yourself, read the small print and contact the firm to find exactly what they do and can do (if you pay). 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ProDave Posted November 23, 2022 Share Posted November 23, 2022 Pretty standard I am afraid. If it were single storey, the hiab on the delivery lorry might reach and you could suggest to the driver a few £££ for him to lift them and stack them at one end of the roof, but I doubt the hiab will reach a 2 storey house. A crane will lift them one at a time and spend the time to get them right, braced then lift the next one. A delivery driver would never take that much time so the best you just might get is all the trusses at one end of the roof still to be handballed into place and braced. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
crispy_wafer Posted November 23, 2022 Share Posted November 23, 2022 We/builder hired a crane, straight off the flatbed onto the wallplate for the joiners to do their stuff. Maybe missed in dialogue or smallprint, frustrating but put it down to experience. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Canski Posted November 23, 2022 Share Posted November 23, 2022 On site we nearly always offload them with the telehandler and arrange for a crane to come afterwards. No point in having a crane standing waiting for a missing delivery. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
saveasteading Posted November 23, 2022 Share Posted November 23, 2022 Relax. You havent been cheated. A hiab capable of doing that lift would be much more expensive. The hiab used is unlikely to have the strength or reach to lift onto the roof. Also, the delivery company are not contractors so the driver won't have the skills or insurance to do it. Best take the realistic view that the delivery cost was low, using the best and cheapest vehicle for the job, so you have not been overcharged. Really, you have not lost out or been treated badly. Can I point you towards risk assessments? If the hiab was going to lift onto the roof, then you should have previously discussed the process with them in some detail. As you now should do for the hoisting. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dave Jones Posted November 26, 2022 Share Posted November 26, 2022 think about it. truss delivery arrives at 2pm, you have been paying 2 or 3 chippies to sit around waiting from 8am. they get a 1/4 trusses on then that's it for the day. The lorry driver takes them back and you try again another day. Doesn't sound very sensible does it. You (not the driver) offload, stack against the scaff then book in the chippies and a crane and hope weather plays ball. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mr Punter Posted November 26, 2022 Share Posted November 26, 2022 I am on a very tight site and have trusses to fit. I have left it to the truss company to do the whole thing to include crash deck, delivery, cranage and install all on their own RAMS. We will just provide scaffold and pay the bill. Expensive but it derisks it. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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