I appreciate the empathy but what I experienced does not really warrant it (except the coffee, that was really bad)
The eventual price I paid was reasonable for a large dealership. If the spanner man did his work according to the schedule then I reckon it would take at least an hour and a half. Just checking the spare tyre pressure would take 5 minutes (valve face down so he has to undo the securing tape and nut and remove the tool kit, remove my packing around the tyre, inflate and reverse procedure. From what I can see he was very thorough and picked and corrected a couple of things I did not notice.
The oil used is very high grade so that and a VW filter would probably cost me $80 if I did it myself.
When I had a Hyundai SUV diesel under a lease arrangement I thought the Hyundai dealership service charges were eye-wateringly high for a so called 'budget brand' (as were their spare parts by the way).
I got the impression that it was not the normal job for the guys who served me, I think a couple of regulars were off sick so I'll cut them some slack and they did not raise any fuss my contesting their pricing.
What will be less justifiable for other more expensive Skoda models, VW, Audis and Bentleys are the higher charges that apply to those. In most cases the oil is no higher grade and not much more used, and I suspect take an equivalent time to execute. Actually I take part of that back, anyone who can afford to buy and run a Bentley/JAG/Land Rover deserves to be charged more
South Australia does not have road compliance test for older cars and sometimes when I drive at night I reckon that 1 in 3 cars have some sort of lighting problem.
Headlight burnt out or out of adjustment, or failure of side, rear, stop or indicator lights.
Now I'll take a guess that most of those cars with issues, if they have a service at all then it would be one of the $99 specials and at that price they just would not be able to check things like lights.
Yes I know it is the responsibility of the driver/owner to check the lights but most of the dip-stick drivers in Adelaide could not give a monkeys. And it seems the police and the authorities do not either. It may not be a direct cause of the high death rate in crashes that South Australia are experiencing at the moment but it symptomatic of the general casualness that seems to be applied to car maintenance here.
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