Gilbertd wrote:
As long as they've done them in the past and know what to expect, you should be OK. I needed one side doing on one car a few years ago (before I knew Marty and others) and as it was January, freezing cold and the work would have to be done outside (garage not wide enough to get the car in and be able to work alongside it), I got a quote from a local LR independent. Quote was £380 all in so I booked it in and left it with them. two days later they phoned to say they couldn't get the hub out as they couldn't remove the ABS sensor other than by drilling it out so there'd be the extra cost of an ABS sensor. Told them to get on with it. A further couple of days later they called to say that the joints had been changed but it needed the tracking doing and the adjuster was seized solid so they recommended replacing the link rod too. Finally, after about a week, they phoned to say it was ready so I went to collect it only to be presented with a bill for £1,050. Their excuse was that it was such a bastard to dismantle that the extra was in the labour......
Never taken a car anywhere since.
I called a local (to where I used to live) LR specialist to quote for flushing my brake fluid a couple of years ago. They wouldn't give me a quote as they said they didn't know how bad it would be until they had the car there. The bleed nipples might be seized, might need new calipers, might need this that and the other.
Took it to Marshalls in Peterborough. Can't remember the exact numbers but they gave me a quote and actually charged me less than the quote!
Clive603 wrote:
ABS sensor pretty much re-defines pig-to-shift if they have been in a fair while. Finally doing my nearside ball joints whilst I have everything out and up in t'air for brake calliper and line change. About 3 hours into the ABS sensor between multiple anointings with Plus Gas and its moved about 1/4". Pretty sure its not coming out in one piece but I do have a spare. Frankly at garage rates if it doesn't move easily sensible approach is to cut the top off, drilling is not the way to go as you are likely to end up with the drill jammed in half a mile of wire, pull the innards and "operate" on the case so the drive shaft comes out. 15 minutes tops with it up on a lift if you have the gear and know what you are doing. What I should'a done but not so easy on axle stands.
Frankly if I were a pro new ABS sensor and Lemfoder link arm would be on the bill automatically. Professional's do it fast, do it once and do it right. Hard to find real professional garages. Most can't get their head round relative cost of parts and time. Especially when new, decent quality but not manufacturer parts are now so relatively inexpensive that fast destructive working is better than careful 'cos I should be able to re-use that unless things are clearly recently changed. Even at home I try far too hard to save things.
Clive
That's pretty much what we do here (DAF trucks main dealer) - if the ABS sensor doesn't come out easily it just stays in the old hub. If the techs have to put that much effort in to removing it chances are it will get damaged in some way anyway and start causing faults in the not too distant future.
No customer (not even the manufacturer on a warranty job!) will pay several hours of labour to undo seized parts so why bother? Much easier to justify the cost of a sensor that's seized in and can't be removed.
Happens with ball joints, rod ends etc.
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