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Robber Baron craps out...
Just got back from a lovely, leefy 'bike ride in the gorgeous (but thin) afternoon sun and wuz talking to my next door neighbour.. A few days ago he told me the local Robber Baron 'HiFi Shop had quoted him 50 quid to fix his (presumably ancient) VCR machine. I told him to tell them to get stuffed and gave him a perfectly tidy Panasonic DVD Recorder I simply never use. The shop has apparently phoned him since and said they could now fix the VCR for 29 quid! ****ing shysters... Then he tells me the local 'Agricultural and Garden Machinery Engineers' http://www.ibbetts.co.uk have just charged him 46 quid to replace a little squeezy tit thing on his lawnmower.... ****ing shysters... |
Robber Baron craps out...
On 6 Nov, 15:29, "Keith G" wrote:
Just got back from a lovely, leefy 'bike ride in the gorgeous (but thin) afternoon sun and wuz talking to my next door neighbour.. A few days ago he told me the local Robber Baron 'HiFi Shop had quoted him 50 quid to fix his (presumably ancient) VCR machine. I told him to tell them to get stuffed and gave him a perfectly tidy Panasonic DVD Recorder I simply never use. The shop has apparently phoned him since and said they could now fix the VCR for 29 quid! ****ing shysters... Then he tells me the local 'Agricultural and Garden Machinery Engineers'http://www.ibbetts.co.ukhave just charged him 46 quid to replace a little squeezy tit thing on his lawnmower.... ****ing shysters... Thats cheap to fix a video..Less and less stuff these days gets repaired as the gears so cheap to re-new.Hence service engineers don't get enough work to live on...so to stay in business prices have to go up.Either that or pack it in and become a driving instructor.Hmmn, wonder what they charge an hour... Borosteve. |
Robber Baron craps out...
In article ,
Keith G wrote: A few days ago he told me the local Robber Baron 'HiFi Shop had quoted him 50 quid to fix his (presumably ancient) VCR machine. I told him to tell them to get stuffed and gave him a perfectly tidy Panasonic DVD Recorder I simply never use. The shop has apparently phoned him since and said they could now fix the VCR for 29 quid! ****ing shysters... I dunno. Just how much an hour has a shop got to charge to cover its overheads? How long does it take just to open up a VCR to say replace a drive belt? How much longer to find an unspecified fault? I'll make a start. To employ a half decent service engineer in the SE of England will cost you about 30 grand a year - before you add on NI etc. So a labour charge of at least 30 quid an hour is the minimum - most will charge rather more. Think you're a bit out of date as regards earning a living, Keith. ;-) -- *All men are idiots, and I married their King. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Robber Baron craps out...
"borosteve" wrote in message oups.com... On 6 Nov, 15:29, "Keith G" wrote: Just got back from a lovely, leefy 'bike ride in the gorgeous (but thin) afternoon sun and wuz talking to my next door neighbour.. A few days ago he told me the local Robber Baron 'HiFi Shop had quoted him 50 quid to fix his (presumably ancient) VCR machine. I told him to tell them to get stuffed and gave him a perfectly tidy Panasonic DVD Recorder I simply never use. The shop has apparently phoned him since and said they could now fix the VCR for 29 quid! ****ing shysters... Then he tells me the local 'Agricultural and Garden Machinery Engineers'http://www.ibbetts.co.ukhave just charged him 46 quid to replace a little squeezy tit thing on his lawnmower.... ****ing shysters... Thats cheap to fix a video..Less and less stuff these days gets repaired as the gears so cheap to re-new.Hence service engineers don't get enough work to live on...so to stay in business prices have to go up.Either that or pack it in and become a driving instructor.Hmmn, wonder what they charge an hour... Oh sure, I got told once 'his time is worth 50 quid an hour when I wanted a small part, one time' but that didn't stop him phoning me when he wanted a PCB-mount valve socket. There comes a point when a shop could just tell you 'it's beyond economic repair' rather than just take your money - my neighbour is 75 and certainly doesn't have spare cash to fritter away! Don't bother to look these up, they were all at 99p when I found them: http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Sony-SLV-SE700... cmdZViewItem http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Aiwa-HV-FX5100...QQcmdZViewItem http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/JVC-HR-J255-6E...QQcmdZViewItem http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Panasonic-NV-H...QQcmdZViewItem http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/JVC-HR-S5967EK...QQcmdZViewItem |
Robber Baron craps out...
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , Keith G wrote: A few days ago he told me the local Robber Baron 'HiFi Shop had quoted him 50 quid to fix his (presumably ancient) VCR machine. I told him to tell them to get stuffed and gave him a perfectly tidy Panasonic DVD Recorder I simply never use. The shop has apparently phoned him since and said they could now fix the VCR for 29 quid! ****ing shysters... I dunno. Just how much an hour has a shop got to charge to cover its overheads? How long does it take just to open up a VCR to say replace a drive belt? How much longer to find an unspecified fault? I'll make a start. To employ a half decent service engineer in the SE of England will cost you about 30 grand a year - before you add on NI etc. So a labour charge of at least 30 quid an hour is the minimum - most will charge rather more. Think you're a bit out of date as regards earning a living, Keith. ;-) Don't talk so stupid, Plowie - I had 50 employees in two firms and probably know a little bit more about paying staff than you do. Add to that I get charged for stuff like 'bike servicing and that Swim is in full time employ, so I'm not quite so out of touch as you'd like to think.... The 'Service Engineer' of that shop is one of the two brothers who have recently been *given it* by their father who is supposed to have retired (but is always hanging about in there). It is a goldmine - they have been strimming the local Chavs for decades; my neighbour has known them and dealt with them for 30 years. There comes a time you tell a person like that when an item is beyond economic repair, not just take them to the cleaners. (Note the drastic 50 to 29 quid reduction...) Asitappens, Shiny Nigel who works at the shop is due round tonight, if he makes it (he's in a state with ME or summat, so there's a chance he won't show) I'll ask him how it's going in the 'repair department' (loft, actually). My guess is that if it's gone quiet they'll have got got rid of the *girl* who did most of the work.... |
Robber Baron craps out...
In article ,
Keith G wrote: Think you're a bit out of date as regards earning a living, Keith. ;-) Don't talk so stupid, Plowie - I had 50 employees in two firms and probably know a little bit more about paying staff than you do. 'Had' being the operative word. Add to that I get charged for stuff like 'bike servicing and that Swim is in full time employ, so I'm not quite so out of touch as you'd like to think.... So pray tell what you feel a reasonable charge would be for this repair - and it might help if you said what it actually consisted of. Plenty of VCRs when they break are simply not economic to repair. The 'Service Engineer' of that shop is one of the two brothers who have recently been *given it* by their father who is supposed to have retired (but is always hanging about in there). It is a goldmine - they have been strimming the local Chavs for decades; my neighbour has known them and dealt with them for 30 years. There comes a time you tell a person like that when an item is beyond economic repair, not just take them to the cleaners. (Note the drastic 50 to 29 quid reduction...) Doesn't your neighbour ever visit stores like Tesco etc and note the price of a new VCR? And therefore is capable of deciding himself if he wants it repaired or not? Asitappens, Shiny Nigel who works at the shop is due round tonight, if he makes it (he's in a state with ME or summat, so there's a chance he won't show) I'll ask him how it's going in the 'repair department' (loft, actually). My guess is that if it's gone quiet they'll have got got rid of the *girl* who did most of the work.... Seems you have forgotten the fixed costs of running any business. -- *If a pig loses its voice, is it disgruntled? Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Robber Baron craps out...
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , Keith G wrote: A few days ago he told me the local Robber Baron 'HiFi Shop had quoted him 50 quid to fix his (presumably ancient) VCR machine. I told him to tell them to get stuffed and gave him a perfectly tidy Panasonic DVD Recorder I simply never use. The shop has apparently phoned him since and said they could now fix the VCR for 29 quid! ****ing shysters... I dunno. Just how much an hour has a shop got to charge to cover its overheads? How long does it take just to open up a VCR to say replace a drive belt? How much longer to find an unspecified fault? I'll make a start. To employ a half decent service engineer in the SE of England will cost you about 30 grand a year - before you add on NI etc. So a labour charge of at least 30 quid an hour is the minimum - most will charge rather more. Think you're a bit out of date as regards earning a living, Keith. ;-) **Not that I enjoy agreeing with Keith, I understand where he is coming from. Let me explain: As a service guy, I assess each job as it arrives. I offer two options to my clients: 1) A rough guesstimate of the job, based on the description of the fault and my experience with the particular piece of equipment. This is free (I know - stupid me). I also advise the client I feel the job is not worth proceeding with. A surprising number of people will after request an item be serviced, even though it is not economical to do so. 2) A full quote, which lists the parts required and the time taken to do the job. For this, I charge AUS$55.00 UP FRONT. That cost is deducted from the final cost. One of my mates in the business now makes more money from quotes (which are not proceeded with) than he does from actual repair work. IMO, if the story related by Keith is factual, then, IMO, the service guy was morally wrong. Legally, probably not, however. Let me also state, that fixing stuff is not the path to riches that it once was. It is hard work and the rewards are not great. Trevor Wilson |
Robber Baron craps out...
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , Keith G wrote: Think you're a bit out of date as regards earning a living, Keith. ;-) Don't talk so stupid, Plowie - I had 50 employees in two firms and probably know a little bit more about paying staff than you do. 'Had' being the operative word. 'Operative' how? I'm retired Plowie - have been for 9 years now, I don't need staff. (If you'd worked a little harder in your youth maybe you could be retired also...) Add to that I get charged for stuff like 'bike servicing and that Swim is in full time employ, so I'm not quite so out of touch as you'd like to think.... So pray tell what you feel a reasonable charge would be for this repair - Anything over 20 quid *absolute max* would be a waste of money - I pointed to a number of eBay auctions where VCRs were sitting at 99p + a bit of postage... and it might help if you said what it actually consisted of. How TF should I know? Plenty of VCRs when they break are simply not economic to repair. You got there in the end.... The 'Service Engineer' of that shop is one of the two brothers who have recently been *given it* by their father who is supposed to have retired (but is always hanging about in there). It is a goldmine - they have been strimming the local Chavs for decades; my neighbour has known them and dealt with them for 30 years. There comes a time you tell a person like that when an item is beyond economic repair, not just take them to the cleaners. (Note the drastic 50 to 29 quid reduction...) Doesn't your neighbour ever visit stores like Tesco etc and note the price of a new VCR? No idea. And therefore is capable of deciding himself if he wants it repaired or not? You're not really picking up on the dynamic here - the guy is 'old school'; his instinct is to take a broken VCR to the local shop (where he bought it) for repair and where he has been a customer for 30 years. He doesn't know about the current 'throway ethos' and had probably paid a ton for the machine when it was new. Where it falls on its arse is the shysters (you need to see them in action) in the shop are/were more keen to strim the old boy (a long-standing customer) for swift 50 quid than point him in a better direction. If you can see no wrong in that, then it tells a lot about you... Asitappens, Shiny Nigel who works at the shop is due round tonight, if he makes it (he's in a state with ME or summat, so there's a chance he won't show) I'll ask him how it's going in the 'repair department' (loft, actually). My guess is that if it's gone quiet they'll have got got rid of the *girl* who did most of the work.... Yes, she has left (some time ago) but it was her own idea, apparently... Seems you have forgotten the fixed costs of running any business. WTF would you know? -- *If a pig loses its voice, is it disgruntled? Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Robber Baron craps out...
"Trevor Wilson" wrote in message ... "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , Keith G wrote: A few days ago he told me the local Robber Baron 'HiFi Shop had quoted him 50 quid to fix his (presumably ancient) VCR machine. I told him to tell them to get stuffed and gave him a perfectly tidy Panasonic DVD Recorder I simply never use. The shop has apparently phoned him since and said they could now fix the VCR for 29 quid! ****ing shysters... I dunno. Just how much an hour has a shop got to charge to cover its overheads? How long does it take just to open up a VCR to say replace a drive belt? How much longer to find an unspecified fault? I'll make a start. To employ a half decent service engineer in the SE of England will cost you about 30 grand a year - before you add on NI etc. So a labour charge of at least 30 quid an hour is the minimum - most will charge rather more. Think you're a bit out of date as regards earning a living, Keith. ;-) **Not that I enjoy agreeing with Keith, I understand where he is coming from. Let me explain: As a service guy, I assess each job as it arrives. I offer two options to my clients: 1) A rough guesstimate of the job, based on the description of the fault and my experience with the particular piece of equipment. This is free (I know - stupid me). I also advise the client I feel the job is not worth proceeding with. A surprising number of people will after request an item be serviced, even though it is not economical to do so. 2) A full quote, which lists the parts required and the time taken to do the job. For this, I charge AUS$55.00 UP FRONT. That cost is deducted from the final cost. One of my mates in the business now makes more money from quotes (which are not proceeded with) than he does from actual repair work. IMO, if the story related by Keith is factual, Like it might not be? Here, knock yourself out and phone them (Andrew is the service guy): http://www.anaudio.co.uk/index.htm If Nigel answers, do me a favour and avoid the word 'Shiny'.... then, IMO, the service guy was morally wrong. Legally, probably not, however. Let me also state, that fixing stuff is not the path to riches that it once was. It is hard work and the rewards are not great. Trevor Wilson |
Robber Baron craps out...
"Keith G" wrote in message ... "Trevor Wilson" wrote in message ... "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , Keith G wrote: A few days ago he told me the local Robber Baron 'HiFi Shop had quoted him 50 quid to fix his (presumably ancient) VCR machine. I told him to tell them to get stuffed and gave him a perfectly tidy Panasonic DVD Recorder I simply never use. The shop has apparently phoned him since and said they could now fix the VCR for 29 quid! ****ing shysters... I dunno. Just how much an hour has a shop got to charge to cover its overheads? How long does it take just to open up a VCR to say replace a drive belt? How much longer to find an unspecified fault? I'll make a start. To employ a half decent service engineer in the SE of England will cost you about 30 grand a year - before you add on NI etc. So a labour charge of at least 30 quid an hour is the minimum - most will charge rather more. Think you're a bit out of date as regards earning a living, Keith. ;-) **Not that I enjoy agreeing with Keith, I understand where he is coming from. Let me explain: As a service guy, I assess each job as it arrives. I offer two options to my clients: 1) A rough guesstimate of the job, based on the description of the fault and my experience with the particular piece of equipment. This is free (I know - stupid me). I also advise the client I feel the job is not worth proceeding with. A surprising number of people will after request an item be serviced, even though it is not economical to do so. 2) A full quote, which lists the parts required and the time taken to do the job. For this, I charge AUS$55.00 UP FRONT. That cost is deducted from the final cost. One of my mates in the business now makes more money from quotes (which are not proceeded with) than he does from actual repair work. IMO, if the story related by Keith is factual, Like it might not be? **IME, your story could be 100% on the money. Trevor Wilson |
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