The price on the invoice doesn't really look out of line to me, but I choose to do my own oil changes and not pay for such a simple job.
Sure the oil price is a little funky, but it only works out a few dollars on the stupid side - nothing to get overly excited about.
There are plenty of cuntier (I may have just made up that word, you got a problem with that?) jobs that I'll give a workshop money for, I'm not even willing to fuck around changing a tyre on a motorcycle.
There are plenty of rip-offs to bitch about, but I usually just do what I can to avoid them.
I won't be buying another OEM oil filter, why pay $25 for OEM when I can get a better filter going after-market and pay US$6.09 for it?
But rather than bitch about what the local Honda dealer charges for an oil filter I'll just purchase some overseas and let those that want to pay more for a worse product do so.
Paying a lot of money for a simple job you could do yourself? Just do it yourself then!
I think that it is a bit on the nose to charge more for oil purchased in bulk and supplied as part of a service than what the consumer can buy in smaller "consumer" packaged quantities. That is just really dumb business IMO. Great way to piss off your customers and not add value...but then that is just me. In general, a bike shop can charge what they like and make up their tariffs how they see fit...but they mustn't be surprised when consumers take their business elsewhere if they are perceived to be not providing value. Charging more for oil provided as part of a service than what retail price is doesn't sound like value to me at all. As a consumer you are free to take your business anywhere you like. If I owned Coleman's or any other bike shop or service shop for that matter, I would be taking issues like this pretty seriously.
But then yeah, I do my own servicing anyway. The times that I have used Colemans in the past, their service has been pretty decent.
Nail your colours to the mast that all may look upon them and know who you are.
It takes a big man to cry...and an even bigger man to laugh at that man.
Yes, sadly Neil cared more for his customers than his business.
Then for reasons I can only put down to people are bastards, quite a few long term customers jumped ship when Callendars expanded. Possibly for the beer.
Many leaving large workshop accounts behind.
Loyalty is over rated these days?
I used to pay my account every week at our agreed rate ahead of everything else. Even food or petrol. A guy I went to polytechnic with just started going to NP motorcycles. Laughed that as a student he couldn't afford the nearly 4k he owed and keep his bike on the road. That really pissed me off. He had the money next student loan to buy an Italian one piece, new boots etc but still did not pay Neil. He eventually did the same thing to them and just left town with a smaller but still hefty unpaid bill. Prize wanker.
Stupid phone / Tapatalk, apologies in advance.
As I said before, they said they had no idea. Of course they never even found out because all the kiwi customers they have they just pay without checking, then they complain that nowadays everything is so expensive. In France you go on a motorbikes forum to give other fellow riders the heads up on dubious business practices and you get thanked. Here they take the side of the business. No wonder National are gonna win again.
Could well be it, maybe they bought half a dozen drums a while back at a more expensive price than the bottles they got a sweet deal on in the meantime and moved more of. Might explain why the charge rates are different. Same liquid but through a different supply/price chain.
"A shark on whiskey is mighty risky, but a shark on beer is a beer engineer" - Tad Ghostal
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