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Where in columbus are you at? I have two buddies in columbus. I can ask them if they know a good reputable shop.DiscPhilosopher wrote:well we went back and I decided that I really didnt know enough about cars to warrent buying it without having an expert check it out first. So i took it to firestone and had them give it the once over for twenty bucks. They told me that both front struts were blown, the right rear wasnt working and it needed a lot of general work (new tires, trans flush, hoses) andyway total came to just shy of $1,900. So obviously I am going to pass on the car, since that is just about the asking price
I agree.....but not everyone is mechanically inclined enough to do the work that we find extremely easy. For example, changing the oil on a subaru is about the easiest thing in the world ( a little more difficult now that my car's lowered) 15 minutes....and that's me taking my sweet old time.-K- wrote:Ok, I'm going to jump in here. The shop you took it to is out to screw you. End of story. Any older car in the $2000 price range is going to need some work or have twice the miles, if it didn't it would still be worth what it cost new. The way I look at it I would rather spend a lot of money on my car that I got kinda rough than spend $15 on an oil change if I had a Kia. Shops are such a rip I wonder how anyone who can't work on a car can afford to drive one, it pisses me off. If you really like the car get it, buy a Haynes and a cheap set of tools. Then do some work on it, when it needs it. my 2c It sounds like it's a lot better off than mine and I paid $2500.
HahahahahaLegacy777 wrote: It goes the other way too. Take art, the metal heap of crap in the middle of the art museum. To me it just looks like a bunch of metal pieces welded together to form a piece of crappy metal. To me, I'd be more interested in the quality of the welds or how much money I could get for the scrap metal, then what it looks like as a piece of art.