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funkbastler wrote in
: Oh, is this limited to Walmart? We had the same thing happen at Pennzoil here in PA, caused quite a leak. We didn't realize that the Pennzoil had buggered up the plug, so we took it to the garage that we normally deal with. Lo and behold, the plug was stripped but in place. A friend at work took his Ford pickup truck (2 year old truck) to the FORD DEALER from where he purchased the vehicle. He went to pick it up at the end of the day, and viola, it was smoking like Jerry Lewis. The dealer actually tried to pass it off onto my friend, saying that it smoked like than and ran rough when my friend brought it in. In actuality, the Ford Dealer mechanics forgot to put the plug in, the ingoing oil drained out, and they ran the truck without oil. Notice that they attempted to deceive him in a ludicrous way, he would have had to be a complete idiot to have accepted the vehicle. Then the Ford Garage attempted to say that they would "rebuild" his destroyed motor. He contacted Ford Corporation and they interceded and required that the Ford Garage install a new motor. Not limited to Walmart, is it? Concerning the tire plug, when I went to Goodyear to have a flat tire repaired, out came the mechanic carrying the tire. The feeling of dread came over me, it must be a serious puncture. He carried the tire to me, and said "this puncture is getting near the sidewall", and recommended buying a new "set" of tires. He concealed the tire so that I could not see clearly. I took the tire away from him (after all, it is my tire) and looked inside. The puncture was well away from the sidewalls. I told him to fix it, which they did. Never had any problems with it. Walmart is not my first choice for car repairs, but I have had vehicles repaired there. I don't believe them to be any less ethical than any other garage. Pursuant to Al's post, when someone performs badly in retail, we often make sure to excoriate the person to the manager and quite often relate the negative experience to our friends. When someone is exceptional, we usually don't even take note. I was at a K-Mart one Christmas season. The employees and customers had been run through the mill due to the busy season, crowded conditions, competitive buyers (vying for the last of this item or that), and late nights (longer store hours). Anyway, this young black saleswoman shined well beyond the rest. She was as friendly as can be, informative, and efficient. I made sure to pursue the manager and tell him that I believed that she was an exceptional employee. We all need to take the time to adulate those deserving of it, especially in these days of declining service. Somehow I can't believe that your mechanics assiduously scrape off ALL the accumulated dirt and mud. Perhaps this is so if you pay $400 a tire and $90 for each tire for balancing. No one is going to waste that much time (they can't, they need to make money to stay in business) perfecting the tire for balance. They'll scrape off the gross stuff, of course, but they are not going to dig into every nook and cranny. Regards. On Sat, 06 Mar 2004 10:46:04 -0500, Al Patrick wrote: Wife used to take her car to WalMart to get the oil changed - until they cross-threaded the drain plug. They're also the only folks I've ever seen want to plug a hole in a radial tire instead of breaking it down and patching it properly. Hmmmm... the folks I use always scrape all the accumulated dirt and mud off the rims before balancing the tires. I think that only somebody who hadn't had much (if any) training would do otherwise. It's kind of a "DUHHH" thing. -- Never say never. Nothing is absolute. |
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