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Dealing with
car transmission shops
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This section
should be easy: Ask questions, ask questions! In the transmission business, there
is a lot of room for the shop to, well... be
dishonest. Some transmission shops in my area are
trustworthy and very good at what they do. Now let's define
what is good, and what is bad.
Just as
I've stressed throughout the book, you need to find someone
you can trust and believe. You will probably only set foot
in the transmission repair shop once during the life of
your car. Thank God for that. Most car transmissions are made to
last the life of the vehicle if properly maintained and serviced
regularly. Most automatic transmissions have a filter that should
be replaced, and the fluid changed periodically. Check the
owner's manual for service interval, but a good rule of thumb
is to change the filter and the fluid every 25,000 miles under
normal conditions.
What are
normal conditions you ask? The owners manual will
usually list what they feel is normal and severe driving
conditions in the scheduled maintenance section of the manual. I
have found that the term "severe driving condition"
usually refers to having the air conditioning on while the engine
is running. If this was the case, it might suggest that you
service the transmission every 30 days to avoid premature wear
and internal damage.
The
manufacturers do a great job at protecting their rears from
lawsuits, and will sometimes be a little too protective, so also
ask your auto repair mechanic for his opinion. If you are in need
of transmission work, you should ask your regular repair shop if they do
transmission repairs in house or subcontract the work to
another shop. If your regular repair shop is willing to
send the car to their transmission repair shop, let them do it for
you.
My shop
does not do automatic transmission repairs inhouse. We have used
the same transmission repair shop for 25 years, and for the most
part have had good experience. We mark up the price of the
transmission work just enough to cover the cost of handling and
the overall hassle we go through to get transmission
repairs for our good customers. Trust me, we do not make a
great deal of profit doing this.
We do
this for our good customers. The customer who has been down
the transmission shop road before knows he/she does not want the
hassle. As I write this portion of the book, I think of the three
cars that we have at the transmission shop right now that were
supposed to have been ready two days ago. Who does the customer call/complain
to? Not the transmission shop. My shop is also the
one you bring the car back to for any warranty problems that you
might have with your transmission. It is nice to know that the
shop that you regularly do your auto repairs with is the
middleman for you.
Our
transmission repair shop will always back us in a questionable
warranty situation, and we have much more pull than you would
as a one-time customer. If you are calling around for price
quotes on transmission work, I wish you luck. I have called
around my area to check out what the competition is doing, and
even I cannot figure out what these guys are doing. Especially
when it comes to transmission work- do not go on price
alone.
Not until
your car is in the transmission shop and your transmission is on
the floor and torn apart in many pieces will they give you the
exact total. I can tell you, after many phone calls in my
area, there is a big difference in price, almost double in
some shops! Once these guys get your transmission on the floor
and you signed that work order we talked about earlier, you are
at their mercy. I really liked talking to the transmission
shops that were honest and up front about their pricing, and what
they would probably find inside the transmission of my 80,000
mile car that had never been serviced and had been making this
strange noise for the last couple of weeks.
If it is
going to cost $1,400 dollars, tell me now. Do not sway
me in at $800 dollars and work me up to $1,600 dollars
later. This is what
usually happens. If you need transmission work, get the
worst-case scenario up frontso you will not be
disappointed in the end. Things to look for at a transmission
repair shop: Look in the parking lot for vehicles that appear to
be abandoned. I always wonder how many of these cars came in on
those inexpensive loss-leader ads, and the final bill ended up
being so much that the owner had to forfeit ownership of the
car-or just left it rather than pay.
What is
the average age of vehicle in the parking lot? If most of the
cars are 10 to 15 years old, they might not be qualified to work
on your newer model. I want my mechanic to be experienced with
cars just like mine. Do
you see any company vehicles that you recognize? Companies
that are well established usually have a fleet manager who is in
charge of maintaining the company's vehicles. Do those
companies have a good reputation in the community? Do they also
perform general auto repairs?
Most fleet
managers go by price first and warranty second, and overall
quality is not as important as getting the cars back on the road
fast and cheap. The fleet manager wants to keep his/her budget
under control, and keep the vehicles on the road. Government or
city vehicles in the parking lot tell me that the shop was the low bidder,
and will probably do the least amount of work just to get
those vehicles back on the road. My best advice to you when it
comes to transmissions is to maintain your transmission
and service it as needed to hopefully avoid having to deal
with transmission shops
Click
Here to learn how to protect yourself from dishonest mechanics
with our ebook "What Your
Mechanic Doesn't Want You to Know"
Don't be the next Victim !
Learn more about car transmissions
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