I'd also add to this that there are many high quality, honest shops out there. My wife and I carefully research where we take our vehicles - we do this as we've lived in multiple cities. Not only have we had great mechanics/shops, but some have turned into long term friends.I am not saying that DIY is not better, $1300 sound reasonable. 2 calipers, 4 rotors and pads. Book time is likely 3+ hours. Parts there going to charge you something approaching list.
So maybe 3 hours @ 200 / hr = $600
Ever present shop fees = $100
Parts - again at list maybe $600
So were at the $1300.
Shop math is to make most of your profit is in parts markup. Not saying its good, but looks like you were quoted something near the going rate likely. Unfortunately.
And the sun will come up tomorrow.......
Dude lives in NoVA, so I'm not surprised there's a bit of premium to live there. I'm about 30-50 miles away from him.
But if I were to DIY a 2012 Yukon(guessing here, he didn't provide the year), I'd spec out at the very least
2 AcDelco Gold/Pro calipers. At about $243+tax, that essentially becomes $500 for both.
Front Pads would be Advics, ACDelco Pro for about 60 Dollars+ship. Or the GM Genuines for 100+ship and tax.
Fluid- I'd go with Advics(aka Toyota's bastard) or GM Genuine.
Rotors - It's not different. Either it's aftermarket Advics or ACDelco Pro at about 80 dollars each, not including shipping and tax. Or the genuine GM part at 113+tax and ship. So it's be about 160 to 226 dollars for two quality rotors.
So that's about $720 for a "cheaper yet still quality" level of parts for a big truck. Before shipping and tax. Fluid not counted.
I didn't. I suppose I could have.I spent $800 just in parts for rotors and pads all the way around on my truck 4 months ago. I could guess with labor the price would have been double.
I just explained that if I did the whole thing spending about $300 in generic parts, a shop can surely match that. No, they would not be putting ACDelco Gold anything. Very simple job.Shops have a ton of overhead that my garage does not. I work for free but do not expect people who pull wrenches for a living to do so.
There is a shop near to me that is expensive; they are always at least a week backlogged. There's a reason for it. Great crew.
Research book time to do a job. If the shop is quoting actual labor guide hours then no rip off.
So lets roll this back to your topic title:To quote: Brake work is gravy for shops and flat rate techs.
They beat the book time and come out ahead. On the other hand, I get it how they can lose on a job which is complicated with things going sideways and exceeding book time.
Do you actually think more than 100 labor for an axle with replacing calipers is obnoxious?DIY auto repair means not having to deal with obnoxious auto repair shop prices
There was a movie where the sun did not come up until the director said "queue the sun".OK-another thread where it's proven to be cheaper to DIY. And the sun will come up tomorrow.......
Now if I had a sand blaster to clean the bracket that could speed things up.
I used one like that to clean the rust from a shop vac that had been left with water in it that had been vacuumed. Did it in my Dad's garage while he was on vacation. When he got back he said "what happened in the garage, there is sand everywhere".
so 4 pads, 2 new rotors, replaced 2 calipers and expect them to do that for 500$?
Hint normal brake job with rotors and pads in my lower income area would be $800-$1000
So your 1300 job with 2 calipers doesnt sound so bad.
Brakes are semi-pricy.. for what it is.. of course they dont order parts from rockauto either.
Can you explain the bolded? I didn't follow.Upon examination, it ended up being all brake pads, 2 calipers, 2 rotors and bleeding the brakes. Got $300 in parts and did it myself in under 2 hours. Most of the time was spent jacking the car up and looking for the right sockets. I am slow and I have zero power tools. There is no way that was $1000 in labor. I spent 30 mins per wheel (and did 3/4, the 4th one didn't need it but I think the caliper is sticking thus needs replacement).