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Many people's lives rely on vehicular transportation, and many people live without specific knowledge of the inner workings of their vehicle. This exposes a vulnerability - taking your car to a shop when it needs repair. How can you be discerning about what your mechanic prescribes? How do you find a mechanic to trust?
Anecdotally, I recently stopped in for a routine oil change for my Toyota. Because I drive a Toyota, I trust that repairs are fast-standard-easy nearly anywhere I might choose to go. For oil changes, I have come to rely on Take 5 only because it is a convenient choice. (Also insert something here about how I find it uncomfortable to go to a car mechanics alone as a woman and have had several bad experiences doing so - at Take 5, I don't get out of the car, and it helps to alleviate the anxiety and has so far guaranteed a good outcome in this regard. There's probably more to say about that, but right now, I don't think this is the interesting part of my story). It is convenient, I know how much I'm going to pay, and they respect when I give them a "no" to their extra recommended services.
When I pulled in recently, I found that I was one of the many who had come in for "quick" oil changes ahead of holiday travel. It was a long line, even the mechanic who greeted me said, "There are two of us here, and we're training new people. It's gonna be a minute." So I was like, yikes, do I stay? Well, I needed it done, I had no where else to be, and the guy ahead of me moved up after 15 minutes.
It was finally my turn, and now the hero of this story arrived. His name was Tamethius. He was calm, cool, collected, and clearly running the show. He was engaging me with friendly banter while meticulously and with devout leadership teaching the ins-and-outs of the oil change maneuvers to the (very small in stature, female) trainees. He was not what I expected when I pulled in, seeing each of the three bays full with a line three cars deep on a holiday weekend, severely understaffed. The vibe in the shop could have been all huffs and puffs, grunts and grumbles. It wasn't. And on top of this, all of these people in an unspoken agreement are putting the trust of their own lives into his hands. The service he commands in his shop means the safety of these vehicles on the road. He wore that responsibility fashionably.
I told him, sincerely, as I left, "thank you for your good work." Simple words, but heavy with meaning when you can give them to someone and mean it. Especially when the job is routine and often thankless.
Do you have a good mechanic? Do you trust an individual or a brand? Did you teach yourself car maintenance so that you don't have to trust anyone? And my other question is, projecting into the future, will anyone casually learn car maintenance anymore??
88 sats \ 0 replies \ @anon 5h
Me. That's it. It sucks, but I'm the only one who doesn't try to bilk me. I'm a rural carrier, too, so I'm constantly fixing something. Right now it's my water pump.
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A lot of it is word of mouth, I'll trust you because my friend trusted you, and I'll keep trusting you until you give me a reason not to.
So far, friend recommendations have been mostly good for auto mechanics, afaict. Contractors have been more hit-or-miss
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @gnilma 2h
I'm lucky. My very good friend who I knew since highschool is a mechanic with over 15 years experience. He owns his own mechanic shop. He was also one of my groomsmen in my wedding; and I was one of his groomsmen at his wedding. So, I pretty much trust him with all 3 of my cars. He's been taking very good care of them and giving me very good pricing while doing so.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @Angie 3h
Recuerdo cuando tenía mi primera bici tuve que mandar a reparar los frenos, antes de eso montaba otras, no eran mías así que nunca tuve que reparar; cosa que aprendí con la mía : el precio y el poco tiempo de duración de reparación, no existía garantía. Entonces aprendí a reparar mi bici incluso a pintarla. Me sucedió algo parecido con mi primer teléfono inteligente, entre precio y ver el poco trabajo que costaba una reparación terminé reparando el mío y el de algunos temerarios que me daban el suyo, principalmente por problemas informáticos, no tengo automóvil, y aunque estoy casada con un mecánico automotriz quisiera tener uno para poder meterle mano también,🤣😂😅
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right now i use a friend who use to be a dealer mechanic
there are a few locally owned mechanic shops where i live that have several locations around town that have solid reputations. i figure they must be doing something right to grow their business like that.
and of course checking out google/apple maps reviews can give a feel for their reputation.
one way to get a feel for a shop is to get an oil change and see how the interaction feels. that's how i found a place i trusted, expensive (standard rates) but trustworthy
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Need Artificial intelligence lol
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