Total float issues

S
Shah. HB 👤 Member for 17 years 6 months
S
Samer Zawaydeh 👤 Member for 17 years 10 months

Dear Shahul,



There are many articles about the subject. What you described is only one opinion "Whoever use it first".



IMHO you need to look at it case by case. The Schedule is prepared by the Contractor. The client doesn’t need the schedule, they need the end product. Schedules are tools to solve the issues. Expert opinion at site is a better way to solve the issues. Especially from the people who have hands on the issues.



With kind regards,



Samer

G
Gary Whitehead 👤 Member for 17 years 2 months

It means the first delay events to occur will not result in EOT regardless of whether it is contractor or client responsibility, up until the point when all total float is eroded.



Regards,



Gary

Forum Sponsor

Top Posters

Julian Pegg
1 posts
Peter Nagy
2 posts
Raymund de Laza
17 posts
Syed_Asad
0 posts
Tony Greyvenstein
0 posts
Ahmed Al-Jubouri
13 posts
Umar Alvi
3 posts
Sibusiso Mahlalela
0 posts
Michael Samanyayi
3 posts
Simon Gumede
0 posts