If it makes ya feel less alone. I picked up my D4 yesterday, same service at $975.
I was a bit shocked as well..
Ill be looking around and getting quotes next time.
Interesting on the LC200..
Seems a bit hit and miss. Although one of the newer ones at work uses less than the one it replaced.
If it makes ya feel less alone. I picked up my D4 yesterday, same service at $975.
I was a bit shocked as well..
Ill be looking around and getting quotes next time.
Mines heading in for its 48k Tuesday week,
Plus a genuine windscreen replacement...
Windscreen has been quoted:
$996 inc installation kit
$350 fitting
I think that's pretty good value - especially when insurance co is picking up the tab![]()
No I dont, I assume from what Justinc said, we both do it the same way. I think we can assume the manufacturers original setup would be correct. by marking it you have a ref point anyway.
I never bag out dealer or large workshop hourly rates or their practices. Even in small business there is plenty of overheads, running costs, outlay of stock waiting for jobs, insurance etc etc etc. Also having an apprentice work on a customers car for servicing used to be the norm "back in my day" (apprentices do have to start somewhere) but there was always a tradie to smack you around the ears after checking on your work. Large businesses often have what we called "lubies" and all they did was vehicle servicing, again a lot werent tradies. You are not paying a "tradesmans rate", you are paying a "workshop rate" regardless who is working on your vehicle.
Regards
Daz
Someone on here once(maybe DaveBlknight) was charged for spark plugs for a TD5
Pays to check the invoice.
We were recently charged for expensive diesel oil on one of our petrol vans....
What does annoy me is paying for a tyre rotation when the vehicle is on a hoist,and all the wheels will be off anyway to check the brakes.
And yes the local Tojo agent does use apprentices to do a lot of the servicing.I am not against this as long as they are supervised correctly,as others have said they have to start somewhere.But,the customer should be charged apprentice rates.Charging at full tradesmans rate is a blattent rip off.
In our game we charge apprentices at a much lower rate,often half of trade,which is fair and reasonable.
Just think about it,the apprentice,depending what year they are,would probably be getting less than $20/hr.In fact a first year will be getting around $10/hr.
Now if the dealer is charging close to $200/hr(LR dealer as an example),that is definitely a blatant rip.
Something needs to be done about it.
The end of the day its a consumers choice as to where they want to take their vehicle and or to decide the extra cost at a dealer versas extra cost (maybe) if something goes wrong (generally, I've not read the Jaguar Land Rover Warranty).
I do my fair share of new vehicle "logbook servicing" on both Land Rover, Jeep and customers have never had a problem claiming warranty when something faults. Using a licensed, qualified repairer following manufacturers service requirements and there should never be a problem with any warranty claim. The average same service cost through a specialist is about half that dealer price.
Vehicle owners are making the choice to move away from dealers and its being noticed. Toyota with their fixed price servicing, Im sure there are other brands doing the same thing. Some dealer prices are also seemingly competative, recently one of my regulars gave me a quote from a Chrysler dealer to service their Jeep Grand Cherokee, same as what I charge, which used to be about half the dealer cost.
Regards
Daz
MY21.5 L405 D350 Vogue SE with 19s. Produce LLAMS for LR/RR, Jeep GC/Dodge Ram
VK2HFG and APRS W1 digi, RTK base station using LoRa
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