The biggest problem with auto repair estimates is that there is no guarantee that what is on the estimate is what you will end up paying for your car repair. Once in a while you will find a motor mechanic telling you a part thought to be defective is not and does not need replacement. But far more often you will find that once you approve the auto repair estimate and work on your car starts, much more than was initially thought has to be repaired or replaced and all your repair budgets go out the window. In some cases this because you are being ripped off and in others the reasons maybe genuine. Even the best car mechanic can’t be sure of the full extent of engine damage till they open it up.

But before you even come to the stage of additional costs, you need to be sure that the auto repair estimate you get is as accurate as possible. Many auto repair shops start by giving you vague ideas of the amount of work and parts that are needed and then quote you the minimum figure, knowing full well that they will end up charging you more than that. The reasons for this, even with the best and otherwise most honest of car repair shops, is basic selling techniques. Car owners tend to get put off when the see large figures for auto repair given to them up front. Car repair services often tend to quote the lowest possible prices just to get the business and once they do, and the work has begun, reveal the true picture knowing that in most cases the customer won’t tell them not to do the work and will agree to the revised car repair quote.

Luckily, there are resources available today that can help you to negotiate not just the estimate cost but also the actual final repair cost. Nothing is set in stone, especially auto repair estimates. Before going further, please keep in mind that if you are able to negotiate lower prices, it does not necessarily mean that the auto repair shop was trying the cheat you with their first figures. They are a business and even the best car repair shops will try to maximize their profit without really cheating you, but by charging what they think the market (meaning you) will bear for the required auto repairs.


5.01.2009. | Categories: Cars, Trucks, USVs | Comments Off

What is at the heart of cool cars everywhere? Is it the speed they can travel at? Is it the thought of the wind brushing your hair? If it’s the latter, then you have a soft top (convertible), or someone’s pinched your roof!

Well, it could be either of these things. Or perhaps cool cars mean something else to you entirely. But to me, it is the shape of the car. Not so much cool cars but cool curves … Sexist? Perhaps, but true none the less. I think I classic car is defined by it’s architecture.

Look at any sports models over the years. What has defined them, made them stand out? Ok, the price is one thing, but take a step back and really think about what makes a hot car so cool?

There is something else that makes a car cool, at least as far as I am concerned. And that is the interior. Or to be more precise, what the interior is made of. My first car lives in my memory to this day, and surely that is the mark of a cool car. I can remember the smell of the leather seats and look of the wooden dash surround. Plastic just doesn’t cut it, especially not in more mass produced models.

And it had curves!

So what else puts the cool into a car for you?

For me personally, low is cool. The closer I am to the ground, the better I feel. Some people like to have a high vantage point, and perhaps that is cool to them. It certainly helps to have a better view of the road from a practical point of view.

For many, the colour of a car defines its ‘cool’. Red is often the colour to fuel associated with the hottest cars around (not surprisingly really). But what about black? There is something mystical about jet black automobiles, don’t you think? To some, an unusual colour is the height of chic as far as a car is concerned. You might not like bright yellow or lime green, but your will always notice them, won’t you. And to some folk, that is all that is required from a cool car.

The article was written by Charlie Cory, who is the owner of Autos Inclusive, a website dedicated to providing news and information about automobiles.

You can visit his website about cool cars, on cool cars.


4.04.2008. | Categories: Cars, Trucks, USVs | Comments Off