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Why neighborhood mechanics rock

Posted May 23 2008, 11:42 AM by Donna Freedman
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Recently I used a coupon to get a $17.95 oil change and tire rotation at a local auto-repair chain. Along with the bill came -- surprise! -- a warning that more work was needed. They suggested a tune-up plus a flush of both the coolant and brake fluids because the former was "dirty" and the latter was "dark and dirty." Horrors.

This may have sounded like a scam -- come in for cheap work, pay for additional work -- but I believed them. It's been a long time since those chores were done. I'm not sure how long. According to an MSN Money article, I should have been keeping a service log instead of (usually) tossing receipts into a folder. Oops.

Clearly it was time for some Chevy coddling, especially since my brakes had begun to squeal. Immediately I thought "$500." That's the number that pops into my head whenever a mechanic pops the hood.

So long, economic-stimulus check -- once you get here, I thought. Originally I'd hoped to put that $600 into my Roth IRA. Well, at least it would pay for a chunk of the repair. Maybe.

I wasn't truly anxious, though, because I trust my car-care professional. Everyone should have a mechanic he can trust.

The family doctor, for cars
A guy who goes to the same church I do recommended this mechanic. His place of business reminds me of the auto shop in the town where I grew up: small and cluttered, with car parts on some of the chairs in the tiny waiting area, and not a single naked-lady calendar. It's just him and another employee, a courteous man who encouraged my halting attempts to converse with him in Spanish.

On Wednesday afternoon, the mechanic listened to my description of the problems and suggested I drop the Chevy off the next morning. That's the best part about having a neighborhood place: I can walk back home in three minutes.

A voice-mail message was waiting when I got out of my first class just before lunchtime. "It's going to be almost $500. Call me and let me know what you want me to do about the brakes."

My first reaction: $500? Ha! I was right.

My second reaction: Good grief. Almost $500 for brakes?

Deal with the squeal
As it turned out, he meant almost $500 for everything: coolant and brake fluid flushes, new front brake pads, the turning of two rotors, cleaning and adjusting the rear brakes, a little TLC for the hand brake, and new air and gas filters, spark plugs and wires. (The factory-installed plugs and wires were still in use.) With labor and tax, it came to $492.99.

Lest some of you write in to say how much less you paid for the same service, remember that this is a decent-sized city with higher overhead than your cousin's garage in Anytown, USA. Mechanic prices vary. So do car part prices.

The fact is, I trust the workmanship -- and $492.99 every so often beats the heck out of 48 monthly car payments. My hope is to drive this seven-year-old vehicle for at least another seven years, preferably longer. My sister kept a car for 16 years; my dad ran a Volkswagen hard for more than two decades, putting two new engines into the valiant little bug. According to an MSN Money article, "Almost any car can be nursed to 200,000 miles without endangering your life, and even a new engine is cheaper than all but the cheapest used cars."

That is, if you can find a mechanic you trust. Another MSN Money article has some search tips, and suggests that you look for a mechanic before you need one. Picture yourself standing in the highway median next to your moribund vehicle -- when the tow truck arrives, where will you tell the driver to take you?

That may seem like fairly obvious advice. Then again, you probably know somebody who never got around to choosing a doctor or dentist -- but who, on the day he woke up with a fever or a toothache, sure wished he had.

I still wish I could put the whole rebate check into the Roth. But at least I'm stimulating the local economy.

Comments

 

Why not do the job yourself.... Pocket the $250.00 labor cost,

the materials are approx $250.00 and the labor time is

approx 1 to 2 hours depending on you abilities. BTW, this

stuff is classic normal usage wear items... no thinking needed.

Really... Just unbolt and replace.... Any functional idiot can

so this stuff... Who do you thing does this stuff!

Coolent                $20.00 ie two containers

Break fuild flush      not needed, this is a con job

Break pads             $70.00 premium if you like

Turning two rotors     $30.00 ie $15.00 each

Cleaning & adj breaks  $00.00 they self adjusting

Lube the hand break    $00.50 of grease mabye

Air filter             $30.00

gas filter             $ 5.00

spark plugs            $40.00 maybe

wires                  $50.00 maybe

Total material cost    $245.50

Total labor            $247.49

Grand total            $492.99

Great article!  My husband is the neighborhood automotive repair shop (30 years now) and it's nice to see support for his kind - sadly, they are becoming a thing of the past.

You are a lucky and sensible lady.  But if you've ever noticed both kinda go together.

I have a mechanic living with me...My husband. People come to him whenever they need something done to there cars like oil changes and brake jobs... Hes changed some motors and trannys. He does it all right here in our yard without the benefit of a garage or concrete ... and he does it cheap..Now I can hear what you are saying..as I have thought it a few times too...."How does he keep it all clean and is it done right?" Well, as long as he has been doing it..there has only been one person come back to him with a complaint...and that was... You are underselling yourself. So this article makes sense... Find someone you trust...find someone you can rely on in a pinch....and never fall for the blinker fluid or (sorry) muffler bearing trick... Those are people this world can do without...

My local Alabama mechanic is a NASCAR pit crew member on the weekends. They fly him out on friday afternoons and back home on sunday nights.  He loves it but more so he takes great pride in training young people interested in automotives. His own son worked in the garage until graduating from high school.  He was also a serious scholar and an Eagle Scout.  Several colleges offered him mechanical engineering scholarships but instead he opted to go to North Carolina and work for a NASCAR Truck racing team.  He will one day move up to Cup Racing and no doubt be a winning crew chief.  In the meantime his dads garage draws excellent mechanics to work there and customers are waiting in line.  They are honest people that take great pride in their work.  It is prestigious to work there and I am proud to be a customer.

i think neighboerhood mechanics if you can find one are great as long as they are ASE certified and keep up with the current technology

I am the neighborhood mechanic and I treat customers cars as if they were my own cars, I only recommend repairs that are needed and explain how stuff works so that they may have a better understanding of mechanical functions. Here is Tip: oil is recommended to be changed every 3000 city miles ( stop and go) but can go up to 6000 miles with a filter change. Oil changes are a very important part of keeping major repairs down to a minimum. You should expect minor repairs( brake pads, belts tesioner pully, timing belts, spark plugs) at about 100,000 to 130,000 depending on how well the vehicle has been maintained, better maintanance less cost or need for repairs.

OMG<< dont forget to check the turn signal fluid

I trust and recommend my mechanic to everyone who is in need.  He has been servicing my families cars for the past 25-26 years.  He had to move a little further out than where he use to be because the area sophisticate's felt his shop was an eyesore (cares, parts, go figure.....).  However he does quality work for less, will tell you when it isn't even worth another penny for repairs, tell you when the chain stores diagnosis is a bunch a bunk by just asking questions before ever hauling your car in to see him and would not work on my mother's car when she brought it to him because he suspected the issue with her car was something that was an issue with the Lexus manufacturing and didn't want to invalidate any free work the dealership would do if pressed (he happened to be right....Lexus replaced the engine and did her maintenance work in her SUV for free).  He will even do work for you and take payments or hold a check for you if you can't afford the work (I live in metro Atlanta---not a tiny city).  He is a true gem.    

I took my car to the dealership in response to a recall notice about a corroded gas tank.  The dealership told me the gas tank was okay, but I needed $2,000 worth of other work including replacement of the gas tank.  I took the car to a local  "shadestreet" mechanic, recommended by some family members, who, after examining my vehicle,  said at least $1200 of the work the dealership said I needed was not needed.  However, he found several other vital problems wrong that did need to be fixed, which I am sure the dealership would have "found" once they started repairs on my car that would have cost me another $1,000 .  Altogether, the local mechanic charged me only $225 for his labor and I bought the parts, a fuel pump, a timing belt, rear brake cylinders, shocks and brake shoes, air filter, and spark plugs, for a total of $467.14 , total cost of repairs $692.14.  After he finished installing the new fuel pump, he told me that my gas tank indeed had rusted out at the seam and was leaking gas, which should have been covered under the recall notice.   Now I have to report this to the vehicle manufacturer to see if they will honor their recall notice and replace my corroded gas tank.  Or was this just a clever hoax to get me into a dealership during low sales time to hit me with a high repair bill in an effort to generate some business.  I think it is a a shame when a "shadestreet" mechanic can be more honest and reasonable with a customer than a "licensed car dealership".  

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