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quarter MOA visionary |
Everybody wants to dance but nobody wants to pay the band. | |||
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Tinker Sailor Soldier Pie |
If I were doing the brakes on my Jeep Rubicon which is my daily driver, I'd certainly get the best parts I could afford, but this vehicle doesn't get many miles nowadays. I'm very comfortable with the parts that I installed. And anyway, it's only the rears, right? ~Alan Acta Non Verba NRA Life Member (Patron) God, Family, Guns, Country Men will fight and die to protect women... because women protect everything else. ~Andrew Klavan | |||
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Loves His Wife |
How much do you think the building costs, property taxes, health insurance, benefits, payroll etc? Is it a lot? Yeah but changing the battery out is a 15 minute job from start (get the new battery from inventory) to the time it's buttoned up. They wouldn't be there to help you with your inspection or the others that are glad to pay someone else to do the work if they charged a cut rate. I loathe working on cars and don't have the time. I don't have the money for those kind of rates either though. I'm fortunate that I discovered a small shop that charges very reasonable rates. I'm happy to see him make money, he does great work and somehow always seems to get to it quick. Took me nearly 20 years to find a guy like that though. I am not BIPOLAR. I don't even like bears. | |||
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Yokel |
That sounds a little steep. There is usually a half hour charge for the lift, rack fee. Racks are not cheap and the shop has got to recover their cost. Then you have the environmental disposal fee. How about the shop fee for rags and a can of brake-kleen? These are all operational charges they have to recoup in the job. Then there is the labor charge. Parts pretty much have to meet or exceed OEM Original Quality. Not the cheapest pads or rotors that can be purchased. I know somebody will say anything sold has to meet OEM Specs. There is such a wide coverage of brake shoes and pads out there it is not always the case. The pads on a Rodeo may be the same ones used on a sedan. The Rodeo is more probable to be used as a tow vehicle then the Sedan so I am sure the shop will use the best pads available. With the liability behind a brake job (Your Life and the Public). Shops will not scrimp anywhere on the job. They usually will bleed and flush the brake fluid on the axle they work on. They will always replace all the hardware that is used in the pad exchange. Not just the tin shims used here but also the caliper guide pins and any rubber boots over them. Caliper mounting bolts. They will use grease or anti-seize on the guide pins. If these are all the same steps you took then compare your price spent with the shop quote. With over thirty years in the commercial truck repair industry and as a past and licensed Commercial Truck Driver one learns there is one repair that can never have cost cutting involved and that is the complete braking system. Beware the man who only has one gun. He probably knows how to use it! - John Steinbeck | |||
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Member |
To me it does not sound that unreasonable replacing for pads and rotors especially if using quality replacement parts. Websites such as the one below can give on an idea of what to expect the repair to cost in their area. http://www.napaautocare.com/estimator.aspx Going to oral surgeon Thursday to find out about a tooth implant. I expect that will be a real eye opener LOL. | |||
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Tinker Sailor Soldier Pie |
Like I said, I like these guys and trust them and give them plenty of business. In fact, they do all of my oil services on my Rodeo. I also will need new tires on the Jeep very soon and have every intention of going through this shop. Since I want to upgrade to new wheels and larger tires, I also may have to install a small lift kit. I may or may not install the lift kit myself, but I'll most likely get the tires and wheels through this shop, and it may be just easier to have them do everything. Point being, I give them my business...but I'm not going to give anyone $300 when I can spend an extra hour or two of my time to do something myself. And to be perfectly honest, I really enjoy doing it. ~Alan Acta Non Verba NRA Life Member (Patron) God, Family, Guns, Country Men will fight and die to protect women... because women protect everything else. ~Andrew Klavan | |||
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Stupid Allergy |
Just had a rear brake job done on our Lexus LS. Was $289 "Attack life, it's going to kill you anyway." Steve McQueen... | |||
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Rail-less and Tail-less |
Shit that's cheap. One of my cars is $1000 per axle. _______________________________________________ Use thumb-size bullets to create fist-size holes. | |||
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Fonky Honky |
Spent $528 on the fronts on my '04 Civic last week. One caliper shot, so the other might not be far behind. Cost was for calipers/rotors/pads and a fluid flush/replacement. Had it required only rotors and pads, I would have done it myself. I just didn't feel comfortable breaking open the lines and bleeding an ABS. _________________________________________ Dei. Familia. Patria. Victoria. Don't back up, don't back down. | |||
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Member |
I have always done my own work, even if I have to buy tools to do it. If I don't know how to do it I will research it. On my Motorhome my oil change with greasing the front end and driveshaft with all the filters was quoted $450. Filters and oil was $200 and an hour of my time. I will continue to do my own work. ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ | |||
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Member |
It will be. But it is worth it, have personal experience. | |||
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Caught in a loop |
Ford wanted that for front brakes and rotors on the Mustang (I thought the rotors looked fine, but they also had 100k miles on them, so they got replaced). Special front rotors, but they wanted to use the OE pads. I paid $57 for the "best" ceramic pad offering at AutoZone and $140 for OEM rotors. Apparently since I have the Performance Package V6, there's a special size front rotor that makes looking for/at aftermarket rotors a confusing pain, so it was easier to just go to Ford, plunk down my credit card, and say, "Gimme this." I then spent the rest of the day replacing the pads and rotors. I know they have overhead I don't, but knowing that doesn't obligate me to patronize the dealership when I'm able and willing to do the job myself. "In order to understand recursion, you must first learn the principle of recursion." | |||
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Get my pies outta the oven! |
Seems high to me. I had my front brakes done, including new rotors, on my Honda Civic for around $250. Keep in mind this is a small, independent and super honest local guy we go to, NOT a stealership service department. | |||
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Member |
That's exactly what quality pads and rotors cost (or more). No reputable shop is going to install the cheap stuff you put on there. So yeah, say $250-300 in parts.....2 hours labor......sounds like the estimate is pretty reasonable. | |||
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Cynic |
And being in East Baton Rouge parish is bad. We have a 5 parish area around here that you have to have a emission test done with the inspection and if your check engine light is on that has to be fixed before you get the sticker. We go to Biloxi about once a month and stay at the Hard Rock and I've noticed ya'll don't have stickers anymore _______________________________________________________ And no, junior not being able to hold still for 5 seconds is not a disability. | |||
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Member |
I have always done most of my own work. The problem is most mechanics are parts changers. I can do that, especially with YouTube! The last time I used a garage, I asked them to check the A/C, and they put front brakes on P226 9mm CT Springfield custom 1911 hardball Glock 21 Les Baer Special Tactical AR-15 | |||
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Striker in waiting |
Gee. I wonder where they live. My dealer wanted $35.99 to change the cabin air filter. Sure. But that was the labor. The filter itself, they were going to charge me $44 more dollars for!!! P.T. Barnum was right. -Rob I predict that there will be many suggestions and statements about the law made here, and some of them will be spectacularly wrong. - jhe888 A=A | |||
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stupid beyond all belief |
Cabin filter for 35 bucks?? They charge a hundo here, i tell them no thanks, i know how to open a glovebox... Around here that price would be good for all 4 brakes done, but 2? Geez. What man is a man that does not make the world better. -Balian of Ibelin Only boring people get bored. - Ruth Burke | |||
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7.62mm Crusader |
Just replaced front pads and rotors for $153.00. That included a short breaker bar and 15mm deep drive socket. I'd call the parts I purchased, mid grade. I sliced open 2 fingers, Ouch, against the lower strut shield. The parts I replaced were in excellent shape for 2 years old. Those ceramic pads would have gone another 2. I think I got a bad caliper also. | |||
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Member |
That's why I always do my own. I think it was a thread Marzy did maybe 8+ years ago about a brake job. Inspired me to do my first one. For less than $400 you can do new rotors, and pads all the way around. Brakes aren't hard. It is dirty. They absolutely rob you on the labor. Train how you intend to Fight Remember - Training is not sparring. Sparring is not fighting. Fighting is not combat. | |||
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