Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the markup on parts?
The repair shop rang and told me a part price and it was more that 400% higher than the retail price online. Presumably the repair shop buys at wholesale rates so what they were trying to charge me was maybe a 500% markup.
The other thing is the diagnostic fee which makes it hard to shop around for repair priced.
I hate this. For this reason, if someone says that they will have to charge me a fee just to see what's wrong with my car, I decline any further dealings and go somewhere else. The only way I'll pay this diagnostic fee is if every single repair shop charges it or if it's a big repair that I prefer done by the dealership.
You don’t ask a doctor to diagnose what is wrong with you for free, why should a mechanic do it for free?
Often they just plug in the machine that tells them what's wrong.
Pretty soon A.I. machines will be able to do that for humans. Get diagnosed at WalMart while waiting.
Anonymous wrote:You've never heard of "free estimates". I wouldn't pay for someone to give me a price on how much to re-paint my house, or to do a plumbing repair. Why should I have to pay for someone to tell me how much a repair job on my car will be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the markup on parts?
The repair shop rang and told me a part price and it was more that 400% higher than the retail price online. Presumably the repair shop buys at wholesale rates so what they were trying to charge me was maybe a 500% markup.
The other thing is the diagnostic fee which makes it hard to shop around for repair priced.
I hate this. For this reason, if someone says that they will have to charge me a fee just to see what's wrong with my car, I decline any further dealings and go somewhere else. The only way I'll pay this diagnostic fee is if every single repair shop charges it or if it's a big repair that I prefer done by the dealership.
You don’t ask a doctor to diagnose what is wrong with you for free, why should a mechanic do it for free?
Anonymous wrote:I think brake jobs are one of the things they overcharge the most for at a shop. Why, because anyone can watch a 15 minute YouTube video and replace their own brakes. I can understand complicated jobs where a lot of things need to get removed to access something, but not the typical brake job costing what they do.
Also as someone who has done some DIY parts cannon work, diagnosis is not as simple as many think. I would pay for diagnosis and if the repair cost is too much, I can take that knowledge given to me and do the repair myself rather than risk repairing the wrong component because im going by a $40 OBD scanner that gives me a vague idea of what's really wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the markup on parts?
The repair shop rang and told me a part price and it was more that 400% higher than the retail price online. Presumably the repair shop buys at wholesale rates so what they were trying to charge me was maybe a 500% markup.
The other thing is the diagnostic fee which makes it hard to shop around for repair priced.
I hate this. For this reason, if someone says that they will have to charge me a fee just to see what's wrong with my car, I decline any further dealings and go somewhere else. The only way I'll pay this diagnostic fee is if every single repair shop charges it or if it's a big repair that I prefer done by the dealership.
You don’t ask a doctor to diagnose what is wrong with you for free, why should a mechanic do it for free?
Often they just plug in the machine that tells them what's wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the markup on parts?
The repair shop rang and told me a part price and it was more that 400% higher than the retail price online. Presumably the repair shop buys at wholesale rates so what they were trying to charge me was maybe a 500% markup.
The other thing is the diagnostic fee which makes it hard to shop around for repair priced.
I hate this. For this reason, if someone says that they will have to charge me a fee just to see what's wrong with my car, I decline any further dealings and go somewhere else. The only way I'll pay this diagnostic fee is if every single repair shop charges it or if it's a big repair that I prefer done by the dealership.
You don’t ask a doctor to diagnose what is wrong with you for free, why should a mechanic do it for free?
Anonymous wrote:I think sometimes a mechanic’s diagnostic fee makes sense like if it’s an issue that requires troubleshooting. If it is a straightforward repair, like replace brakes or do scheduled maintenance, then no.
What I’m not crazy about is paying for retrieving an OBD code. There shouldn’t be a charge for that if I can get it done free at Autozone. The repair of that code is different though.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know if it was "freon".
It was whatever makes the AC cold.
Anonymous wrote:You've never heard of "free estimates". I wouldn't pay for someone to give me a price on how much to re-paint my house, or to do a plumbing repair. Why should I have to pay for someone to tell me how much a repair job on my car will be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the markup on parts?
The repair shop rang and told me a part price and it was more that 400% higher than the retail price online. Presumably the repair shop buys at wholesale rates so what they were trying to charge me was maybe a 500% markup.
The other thing is the diagnostic fee which makes it hard to shop around for repair priced.
I hate this. For this reason, if someone says that they will have to charge me a fee just to see what's wrong with my car, I decline any further dealings and go somewhere else. The only way I'll pay this diagnostic fee is if every single repair shop charges it or if it's a big repair that I prefer done by the dealership.
You don’t ask a doctor to diagnose what is wrong with you for free, why should a mechanic do it for free?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think sometimes a mechanic’s diagnostic fee makes sense like if it’s an issue that requires troubleshooting. If it is a straightforward repair, like replace brakes or do scheduled maintenance, then no.
What I’m not crazy about is paying for retrieving an OBD code. There shouldn’t be a charge for that if I can get it done free at Autozone. The repair of that code is different though.
Anyone can retrieve an obd code, no skills required and the reader is $15. It is the matter of the opportunity cost of mechanics time. It is more than the autozones sale person
Anonymous wrote:I think sometimes a mechanic’s diagnostic fee makes sense like if it’s an issue that requires troubleshooting. If it is a straightforward repair, like replace brakes or do scheduled maintenance, then no.
What I’m not crazy about is paying for retrieving an OBD code. There shouldn’t be a charge for that if I can get it done free at Autozone. The repair of that code is different though.