Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s the work that “needs” to be done? Itemizing helps.
Replace the front exhaust pipe - $2600; replace the front strut - $1,100; and replace the front upper strut shock -$530. These are the three most expensive items. Several other items range from $50- $300.
Ummm no, way overpriced. And what is a "front exhaust pipe"? The pipe running from the manifold to the muffler, and they want $2600 for a $100 part and $100 labor job? LMAO!
I appreciate you laughing. I swear it seemed bogus, but I don't know cars. Honestly, had the dealer listed one or two things, I would have just paid for it, given the car's age. It was their over-recommending repairs that sent me running. Who would pay that much for a 16-year-old car?
This is what I copied and pasted from the invoice if it makes any more sense:
REPLACE FRONT EXHAUST PIPE, EXHAUST LEAK FROM FRONT PIPE
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s the work that “needs” to be done? Itemizing helps.
Replace the front exhaust pipe - $2600; replace the front strut - $1,100; and replace the front upper strut shock -$530. These are the three most expensive items. Several other items range from $50- $300.
Does your exhaust pipe cause you to fail inspection or emissions?
I’d get a second opinion from a non-dealer mechanic. Dealers tend to replace things that may only need fixing. Plus their rates are higher.
Is your car in otherwise good shape? Body damaged or rust? AC work? How’s interior?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s the work that “needs” to be done? Itemizing helps.
Replace the front exhaust pipe - $2600; replace the front strut - $1,100; and replace the front upper strut shock -$530. These are the three most expensive items. Several other items range from $50- $300.
Ummm no, way overpriced. And what is a "front exhaust pipe"? The pipe running from the manifold to the muffler, and they want $2600 for a $100 part and $100 labor job? LMAO!
Anonymous wrote:You could easily get 250,000 miles on that car.
I bet a dealer could make quite a bit of cash on that car that you couldn't make yourself selling privately. Mark up the price and sell it with an extortionate rate loan.
My friend wanted to buy a 15-year old Subaru from me that the dealer would have given me $750 for. He knew the engine oil leaked at the gasket but that it had good regular maintenance and was clean inside. He gave me $1K. It lasted 1 year without work. When it broke, he sold it for $500 to someone who did the work to put it back on the road. It will probably last another 30-40K because of the parts I already maintained on it. Toyota are better than Subarus.
Anonymous wrote:I would ask around (or tell us your local area) for a mechanic recommendation. It’s never the dealer. And I usually don’t let the mechanic who failed me on an inspection do the repair. I’ve had the same guy fail me twice and the guy down the road says there’s no issue (but makes suggestions for cost effective ways to repair).
Anonymous wrote:I would ask around (or tell us your local area) for a mechanic recommendation. It’s never the dealer. And I usually don’t let the mechanic who failed me on an inspection do the repair. I’ve had the same guy fail me twice and the guy down the road says there’s no issue (but makes suggestions for cost effective ways to repair).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s the work that “needs” to be done? Itemizing helps.
Replace the front exhaust pipe - $2600; replace the front strut - $1,100; and replace the front upper strut shock -$530. These are the three most expensive items. Several other items range from $50- $300.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s the work that “needs” to be done? Itemizing helps.
Replace the front exhaust pipe - $2600; replace the front strut - $1,100; and replace the front upper strut shock -$530. These are the three most expensive items. Several other items range from $50- $300.
Anonymous wrote:What’s the work that “needs” to be done? Itemizing helps.