Re: Engine repair ethics question
Seeing as how I do my own work, and never take anything to a shop, I have to agree with those who stated that the bill should be paid for. First thing though is that the mechanic should be talked to directly, not the wife, the dog and anyone else who the mechanic is trying to get to do his dirty work. <br /><br />The mechanic has been unprofessional throughout. He needed to take your info, there needed to be an understanding, in writing, that any additional work must be agreed to before being done. He needs to speak with his customers directly, not have his wife do it because she is a better nag than he is and can get money out of the suckers by nagging it out of them. Of course, this is a two way street. Consumers need to enter these situations with their own best interests in mind. Basically, it if isn't written, it doesn't exist. <br /><br />I would talk with him, see if he will negotiate the price, but figure on paying the whole thing. Suck it up to experience, and then if the motor does not work properly, force him to fix everything because now you have no idea what all he "checked", and could very easily have screwed something else up, hoping for a return visit. Mechanics who decide they will do whatever they want without permission open themselves up to a lot of heartburn. They stand a greater chance of the item boomeranging back because it isn't working right, which is why I don't blame them for not wanting to do work like this. I have done plenty of repair work for others, but I always check it out first, let them know the problem, fix what they want fixed, and make them sign paperwork acknowledging that problems that were not repaired are not my responsibility.<br /><br />Guess that is why I do my own work...