I’m standing near an old Toyota
Cressida this morning I was doing a diagnostic check on, when a guy storms in
the big shop door, who looks like he probably played linebacker for one of the
NFL teams this past Sunday. He was upset. Names will be anonymous for the
protection of innocents… like me. He deserves a classic name for this blog
though. He will be Tyro Rex.
Let me explain something about
owning an auto repair shop in the East Oakland demilitarized zone for three
decades. I’ve seen, interacted with, and traded witticisms with some very scary
looking people. I’m never belligerent, nor do I go through any facial tics or
voice inflections guaranteed to annoy or provoke. I listen very well, and
condescension is not a part of my make-up. Tyro was about to test me.
“Hey, anybody here?!” Tyro
shouts out as I’m walking toward him.
“Hi, can I help you?”
To describe what Tyro Rex looked
me over with as a glower would be doing a disservice to the barely contained
rage his features spiked at me. “I need you to come with me! Bring some
transmission oil!”
This was a first, so I may have
smiled just a little.
“Well?!” Tyro only had one
volume level tone: loud and annoyed.
“Maybe we better start over, Sir.
Hi, how may I help you here in my shop?”
Tyro’s face twisted into a mask
of horror Freddy Kruger would have been proud of. “I’m tryin’ to tell you! My Ford
is stuck down at the store on the corner! It’s revving but not moving, (insert
street lingo for someone who has immoral and illegal relations with the
matriarch of his family)! I need you to put some transmission oil in it!”
Second aside here for the folks
unacquainted with costs in vehicle repair. Transmission oil cost is expensive.
It runs anywhere from $6 to $18 a quart – the reason being in a professional
garage we have to carry synthetic blend or full synthetic transmission oil of
different varieties that will mix with whatever is in the vehicle we add it
too. The days of running down to the store and buying a quart of Ford/Mercon
tranny oil for 50 cents passed into the annals of history decades ago. I
decided to try for some facts first.
“What year and make do you
have, Sir?”
“What the… it’s a damn 2003
Explorer! I just need some transmission oil!”
Tyro and I were going to be stymied
here by an unfortunate fact concerning his vehicle: the 2003 Ford Explorer has
no dipstick tube, and therefore no way to add fluid easily. It is a sealed
unit. I won’t go into that here because no one in their right mind should be
doing it in the backyard. Secondly, I only stock Mobile 1 synthetic trans oil
for Fords requiring Mercon V fluid. It runs $12 a quart on sale. There wasn’t
any use in getting into the price with Tyro because neither he nor I could put
any in it down the street anyway.
“Okay, here’s the thing. You
have a sealed transmission. There’s no way to add fluid to it. When it needs
fluid, it is a very complicated ordeal done from under the vehicle. The other
problem with…”
“What?! That can’t be true! No
$#%&*^@ way!”
“Hold on. Let me finish what I’m
saying. If you don’t want an explanation, walk away. I don’t plan on spending
the day listening to you shout at me. If you’d like an explanation, calm down
and lower your voice.”
Tyro Rex stared at me like he
was a grizzly bear and I was a bag of chicken MacNuggets. When he remained
silent, I took that as a cue to go on.
“The 2003 Explorer transmission
is sealed. You can’t add fluid to it on the street. If yours is slipping, that
is trouble… big trouble. Ford had all kinds of problems with the tranny in that
one. Have you been noticing a flashing overdrive light coming on?”
“Yeah… so what? I don’t care
about the damn overdrive!”
“Unfortunately, on your vehicle
it usually means the transmission is shot. I can give you a recommendation for
a transmission shop nearby, but I’ll warn you right now, it will be expensive
to fix. The other thing is you’ll have to tone down your approach. We didn’t
build your vehicle, nor did we wreck it. Screaming at repair people will not
get your Explorer fixed. Would you like the information for the transmission
shop?”
Tyro appeared to be getting
ready to get himself some, but then he spun around with a long expletive filled
goodbye. Yep, there’s nothing like the automotive repair business to get the
blood pumping. I bet now that I have this blog written my blood pressure is
probably back to only coronary level. :)
I admire your calm in the face of such antics. Definitely a good skill to have. Not an easy one too acquire.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Charles. It's mostly practice, and that I don't look for ways to be offended. I was aware right off the bat Tyro Rex knew he had major problems. He hoped if he could get me under the hood of the Explorer down the street, that somehow his transmission problem would be mine instead of his. That was not going to happen. :)
ReplyDeleteI really hope that one day you will collect these car shop stories in a book! It would be a great one! :-)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Vesper. I just don't think my real life customer relations has that 'Fifty Shades' type potential. :)
ReplyDelete