--- permalink: "/posts/{{categories}}/{{slug}}" title: YABS - Yet Another Bad Shop categories: ["automotive"] tags: [] layout: post.liquid is_draft: true --- Today I received a text message from a local mechanic/auto shop asking me to leave them a Google review. It was an automated message from a shop that I know well and have used many times in the past. Unfortunately, I have had several poor experiences (at the time they seemed horrific) with them in the past year and I can honestly say they'll never receive my business again. Now I could have used this as an opportunity to leave them an anonymous nasty-gram but instead I'm going to do the opposite. I'm going to write about everything I don't like about them without telling you who they are or hiding who I am. Why would I do that? Well for one, they were an excellent shop for many years. I believe a recent change in management is to blame and I'm not going to ruin their chances of making a comeback (because frankly I would like for them to rebound). And secondly, I don't believe in hiding. This page and its author are public knowledge. Now, in no particular order: a sample of awful work from yet another bad shop. # Mom's Truck -- Balls Out Mom's truck is a 2007 Chrysler Aspen that she loves very much. Dad does a whole lot of work on it himself (the both of us do pretty much everything we can in-house so long as we have the right equipment). We've been taking her truck into this shop for years because we've found them to be reliable, efficient, and economical. As I said before, at some point in their recent history they changed hands -- either ownership or management, I can't remember which. It was around this time that Dad decided to overhaul Mom's front suspension. He replaced the ball joints, tie rod ends, and a few other worn out parts. He then did his own best-guess front-end alignment, but left everything loose so that YABS could finish up the alignment and tighten everything. Now read that again because it's important. Dad did his own alignment in our driveway (as a cost-saving measure), got it decently close, but then instructed this shop to finish the job and tighten everything up. Now here's where things fall apart. This shop full of professional mechanics took one look at the alignment Dad did and decided it was good enough. Hooray for Dad and supernatural mechanical skills, but the shop didn't even touch the car. They called Dad back to come pick up the car, telling him it was already good to go. They never tightened a thing, even after Dad explicitly told them everything was loose and needed to be tightened but they didn't to touch a thing. So what happened? Dad picked up the car assuming everything was A-OK and Mom drove the car for about a week before the two front tires wore down so badly they had to be replaced immediately. Everything fell out of alignment as things loosened further and further and the tires wore unevenly until they ripped themselves to shreds. The worst part? These weren't tires with 6+ years on them. These were brand new tires. So YABS got to install two more front tires and then tighten everything. They did not cover the costs, presumably because it was Dad who had done the alignment. Strike one. # Friend's Minivan -- Crude Necessities A good friend of ours drives a 2005-2006 Chrysler Town and Country. It was actually Mom's car before upgrading to the Aspen (the minivan was perfect in every way but it couldn't tow). Our friend has been using YABS for just a long as we have. Once again, things started getting kinda strange after several years of good service. She started getting charged extra for simple repairs she had them doing very consistently. They also started tacking on extra items for routine jobs. She would go in for an inspection and they would claim she needed a new Part X. Now this in and of itself isn't an uncommon or even strange request to make. As cars age they need things and sometimes you don't know what they need until you visit a professional mechanic. They remember the things you forget about. One day they did all the forgetting, and they forgot a pretty important, nay, crucial engine component: motor oil. Our friend took her minivan into YABS for a routine oil change. Good diligence on her part. And she's not the type to do that change on her own. She's too old to get under a car anyway (no offense!). So she took the van to YABS and they did a job they've done thousands of times: drain oil, replaced the filter, and gave her back the car. Easy peasy right? Now I know I'm not a professional but I'm thinking someone might have wanted to double-check that several quarts of synthetic had left the shop shelf and gone into the car they just backed out of the bay door. Now this part of the story I'm a little fuzzy on so take it with a large, heaping grain of salt, but I can say for a fact that they failed to *completely* refill the engine oil before returning her car. Supposedly there was enough in there such that the minivan survived long enough for them to realize it before she drove off. # Monty, My 2013 Ford Focus -- Nut Allergy # Ole Blue -- - hudson hubcap, ruined tire - monty lugnuts, buy more parts - good things -> hassle-free inspections, etc., honestly years of good service