bluex
Full Access Member
- Joined
- May 9, 2013
- Posts
- 1,969
- Reaction score
- 2,568
- Location
- Spartanburg SC
- First Name
- Paul
- Truck Year
- 1978
- Truck Model
- C15
- Engine Size
- 350
From a consumer perspective I can give an example of how people routinely get it up the ass.
I had an F150 that had tranny issues on warranty w/32k miles. Hard shifts from 2nd to 3rd. Dealer fixed it saying the valve body needed cleaning.
At 44k miles the tranny **** the bed and cost me $2400 to rebuild. Dealer gave me a break because it was just out of warranty. How nice of him.....
At 105k miles it started shifting hard again from 2nd to 3rd. First dealer quoted me $3400 to R&R with a rebuilt unit. Second dealer quoted me $2700 for same R&R.
Both refused to look at the valve body as detailed in their national repair database because it was now over 100k miles.
After getting totally pissed I went home, put the truck up on the ramps, dropped the pan, filter and valve body only to find a broken clip and bent spring inside the valve body. Took the clip and spring to AAMCO who found replacements in a spare parts bin (Service manager didn't charge me anything for them). Took them home, put it all together.
New filter and fluid cost me a total of $75 and runs perfect fours years and 40k miles later.
So not to pick on you but just to reply to your example here. The problem with this is you went to a dealer, but its also partly the way the consumers and our current culture have changed the repair industry as a whole.
I can remember when I was a kid at a certain point in his life my father was DONE working on vehicles and started taking them to shops. Then you would drop them off, tell the problem, it would be diagnosed, repaired an youd pick it up an pay the bill. They generally called an told you the problem and what the total would be before actually fixing it.
Now a days people want to know exactly whats wrong with it an how much it will cost to repair the moment it's dropped off or based off some super vague description over the phone. In your example if you had let them diagnose it the bill would have been lower for sure since a complete r&r wasn't necessary.
I have tried an tried to just tell people our hourly rate an they don't want to hear it, they just want a total for the whole job. This makes me quote a higher price that's worst case example in my mind so I dont lose at the end of the day when things go wrong. Our entrie culture has changed from a fix it/make it last to just replace it as fast an cheap as possible. This is why you wind up with a quote for a new trans when all it needed was a few parts. We've changed to culture that just throws money/parts at a problem till it goes away instead of taking the time to investigate an fix exactly what's wrong.
I guess my point is if people would be ok paying a hrs labor for a diagnosis things like that wouldn't happen. The majority of consumers think that's outrageous though and they just want to know a total and it better not be over that amount when your done either, regardless of what you found or what happened while in the process of fixing it.