Originally Posted By: eljefino
Originally Posted By: M1Accord
Originally Posted By: eljefino
You gotta drive around.
Just got back from my inspection, the mechanic that did mine drives a rat rod with iron gate hinges on the suicide doors, a stop sign for a floor pan, no fenders (legal on street rod plates), a non functional garden spigot on the side of the radiator frame, etc etc.
Just look for a hole in the wall shop with a bunch of junk cars laying around, that's busy enough they won't need to make up work.
You can't drive around. Once you failed at one shop, it is in the data base and you'll also have a fail sticker on your windshield. You are doomed.
I mean, you have to meet a mechanic you like and who likes you.
I remember your Bronco you were failing for jerry rigged headlight and damp axle seal, even with a rejection sticker you could ask someone "it's not that bad, is it?"
IOW, build a relationship with a mechanic before you have to go in for your sticker. It's hard if you do most of your own work and only see the guys once a year.
The only way to build relationship with mechanics is to spend money, a lot of it, there. I drive cars that don't need fixing yet and I do my own maintenance. Therefore, my name isn't going to be in their database. And if it was, they would know who they can up-sell.
I had that "build a relationship" experience when I had someone worked on my two cars to replaced things like TB, WP, brakes, etc. These are not repair but rather routine maintenance. Building relationship ended up costing more because it seems like a lot of things needed replacement. At least they were replaced but I can tell you that not all of them needed immediate replacement. For example, and this was not in my case, if brakes fluid are good for 50k miles/2 years and only 35k miles were driven in one year, then technically they are still good for another 15k miles and one year. But I bet you shops would love to change it for you every year or six months if you let them.
Personally, I trust my own diagnostic than that of a shop. I have my best interest in mind. As adults, people should be trusted to take care of their own cars, whether via DIY or having someone else do it. In VA, the system is rigged in favor of shops as they are the one doing inspection. For my case, 3 shops said 3 completely different things. And no, none of them checked brake lines and none of my wheels ever came off.