Why would that be any different? If it's slow you would get sent home with no pay anyway. Most shops aren't going to pay employees to sit around and twiddle their thumbs.
Unless it’s govt shop.
Why would that be any different? If it's slow you would get sent home with no pay anyway. Most shops aren't going to pay employees to sit around and twiddle their thumbs.
I should have clarified that I am aware of hybrid pay systems and minimum hours (especially in a union shop). I was trying to describe both ends of the spectrum.****, you'd be surprised. My shop pays a guarantee, 18.80 for light duty and 27.15 for Journeyman and they almost never send people home.
I got a job as the head mechanic working on fleet vehicles. Love it Treated and paid well. Job pays hourly.Been slow here too. It picked up for awhile but now is back to being slow at all the shops around me not just mine. That’s why I am looking for a place that pays hourly.
Ah yeah Hybrid, I knew there was a term for it. I think we've talked about this before ha.I should have clarified that I am aware of hybrid pay systems and minimum hours (especially in a union shop). I was trying to describe both ends of the spectrum.
Ah yeah Hybrid, I knew there was a term for it. I think we've talked about this before ha.
I'd definitely recommend it as not getting paid is ******** and another ****** side of the industry. I'm also curious if they have a legal obligation to pay minimum wage as American Locamotive pointed out. It sounds like some people are getting nothing...zero, if they have no hours. Doesn't sound legal to me to be honest, but I've heard about so many people either co-workers or members here who came from other shops and weren't paid.
I just want to clarify that the minimum-wage hours thing only counts for the entire work week. As in your wages must equal minimum wage for the hours you worked by the end of the week.Ah yeah Hybrid, I knew there was a term for it. I think we've talked about this before ha.
I'd definitely recommend it as not getting paid is ******** and another ****** side of the industry. I'm also curious if they have a legal obligation to pay minimum wage as American Locamotive pointed out. It sounds like some people are getting nothing...zero, if they have no hours. Doesn't sound legal to me to be honest, but I've heard about so many people either co-workers or members here who came from other shops and weren't paid.
Do you think if auto techs required a license from the state like a plumber or electrician that the pay would be higher or that you could command a higher pay rate if you needed that license to do the work?^ I get 20%, but relate. There is no such thing as tech shortages, they simply dont exist. It's a pay and working condition shortage. Pay luber-goober 100k and full benefits, climate controlled shop with ac, shop supplied tools, and no screaming at the techs policy, and people will be lined up.
If the business cant afford to pay for the labor they require, at the price they charge, prices need to rise, profits need to drop, or the business cannot operate in said economic conditions.
Without a strong front desk, you can get in trouble quick. We get the same staffing ********, someone is on vacation and now you're stuck working open to close like a luber-goober making no money.
Do you think if auto techs required a license from the state like a plumber or electrician that the pay would be higher or that you could command a higher pay rate if you needed that license to do the work?
I always thought the biggest scam ever in the automotive repair world was making mechanics pay for their own tools. When I was an industrial mechanic working on $3,000,000 CNC machines, the company paid for all of the tools, and the toolbox they were in. If I needed any tool at all - they'd order it no questions asked, and it'd be there next day.Eh, maybe. Its slowly getting to the point the cars just aren't being fixed. The idea of a tech paying for 50k plus in tools, thousands in scan tools and updates, to make 45k a year working 50 hours and weekends just ain't gonna cut it.
Did the workers take care of the company tools and put them back in their places? Did several workers have access to the tools?I always thought the biggest scam ever in the automotive repair world was making mechanics pay for their own tools. When I was an industrial mechanic working on $3,000,000 CNC machines, the company paid for all of the tools, and the toolbox they were in. If I needed any tool at all - they'd order it no questions asked, and it'd be there next day.
Always absolutely blew my mind that auto technicians are generally expected to pay for their own tools, even though their toolbox for the most part lives in one location. Crazy to me.
Nailed it. Far too many variables that go into me making money and its a nightmare.It's not worth having to fight to be paid every day.
Not sure what year BMW, but Mercedes is the same, and you don't "have" to do it. I'm guessing they just reset the battery throughput, or at least thats what we call it. Internal resistance builds up due to x y z and as such the charging system needs to do more or less to charge the battery. The system will adapt the charging characteristics of the battery in part based on this reset. If not reset the system does not know the battery was replaced and may apply different charging characteristics to the new battery. A non issue really...but it can cause some issues with the eco start stop functions if optioned with it. Just a feature of adding more technology to vehicles.He has a BMW and told me the car had to be reprogrammed after the battery was changed, I was like WTF? So I could physically change out the battery, but the car wouldn't run correctly without some specialized scan tool. Why so complicated?
I always thought the biggest scam ever in the automotive repair world was making mechanics pay for their own tools. When I was an industrial mechanic working on $3,000,000 CNC machines, the company paid for all of the tools, and the toolbox they were in. If I needed any tool at all - they'd order it no questions asked, and it'd be there next day.
Always absolutely blew my mind that auto technicians are generally expected to pay for their own tools, even though their toolbox for the most part lives in one location. Crazy to me.
Nailed it. Far too many variables that go into me making money and its a nightmare.
Not sure what year BMW, but Mercedes is the same, and you don't "have" to do it. I'm guessing they just reset the battery throughput, or at least thats what we call it. Internal resistance builds up due to x y z and as such the charging system needs to do more or less to charge the battery. The system will adapt the charging characteristics of the battery in part based on this reset. If not reset the system does not know the battery was replaced and may apply different charging characteristics to the new battery. A non issue really...but it can cause some issues with the eco start stop functions if optioned with it. Just a feature of adding more technology to vehicles.
Yeah same with ours, connecting the tool and going through the menu takes longer than resetting it. It definitely should be done, I wouldn't advocate someone not do it, but Ive seen techs forget and the car shows up months later with no apparent issues so I was just saying its possible that a home owner could replace the battery if they so insisted. It may shorten the lifespan or the lifespan of another charging component I'd imagine. Or perhaps your eco start stop will finally function properly (and not workFord too. It changes the charging strategy to properly maintain the battery, with minimal alternator usage. You have to enter CCA, AGM/LA, group number, etc. It's a good idea to always do it IMO. It takes longer to get to the menu in the scan tool than actually reset it.
Variables...... yeah. You can make a killing doing this. Or sit around and dump oil. The show "Ice Road Truckers" said it best - It's the dash for the cash. Only so many repairs, broken cars, etc in one day. Get cooking and knock them out. Plan your schedule, how you'll bring the cars in, what order, what's on the schedule, etc. The big killer is making sure there's enough actual work. Not stupid ******** like inspections and waiter LOFs. Actual work. Broken vehicles and diagnostic work. Grinding brakes, water pumps, misfires, stuff involving pulling front clips, etc. I would love to know how much I could actually output with unlimited broken cars. Not scrounging for loose tie-rods on $25 LOF/rotates, but a parking lot full of drivability and radiators.
Meursault74 said:Do you think if auto techs required a license from the state like a plumber or electrician that the pay would be higher or that you could command a higher pay rate if you needed that license to do the work?
Trades school training is only useless if it isn't combined with practical experience. Tests and school are not a substitute for an apprenticeship. Here in Canada every red seal certification trade combines rigorous testing on your diagnostic abilities with a minimum amount of practical experience. In Europe, the bar for training is set even higher. Back when my dad moved the family to China for work, one of my childhood friend's dad was the general manager at a indirect competitor - a German owned wool spinning plant. He was one of those German factory apprentices promoted from the ground up. His duties included fixing the machinery if anything broke down. This is in stark contrast to many companies in the US and Canada run by bean counters who have maintenance needs. There is a disturbing tendency to use worn out equipment and/or not have at least one qualified in house technician on duty or at least on call to quickly deal with any equipment break downs. The Toyota factory in Japan that is responsible for producing Lexus vehicles and has a helicopter and helicopter pad for shuttling personnel back and forth between the plant and head office in order to resolve any production issues as quickly as possible.^ dated, compared to ASE tests? What a joke. Shows how worthless such programs are. We hired a kid from the local high school vo-tech program. Idiots have him studing rebuilding techniques for iron block pushrod motors that haven't been made in 30+ years. No, we ain't measuring for bore taper, it's getting a used motor from a junkyard or scraped. Kid had never even heard of an electronic parking brake, but we're studying points ignition and using a dial indicator to set in mechanical lifters.....
Don't even get me started on these idiot trade schools not teaching them how to rack cars. I could strangle those instructors.
If you are having trouble selling necessary work to customers, you are building up your customer base with the wrong type of customer. Once you have a big enough customer base, you tell those customers who don't show pride of ownership when it comes to maintenance and those who disrespect you to get lost.Right, but you're working on a 3 million dollar machine. I'm working on convincing some idiot that having coolant squirting out of the water-housing on the back of the head is, in fact, something worth addressing. Your business understands downtime costs money, and they understand equipment needs maintaining and repairs. "People" don't think like that.
If you are having trouble selling necessary work to customers, you are building up your customer base with the wrong type of customer. Once you have a big enough customer base, you tell those customers who don't show pride of ownership when it comes to maintenance and those who disrespect you to get lost.
Good customers will value time over money. You should have no problem selling red light maintenance items. Upselling yellow and green light jobs to well to do customers should also not be an issue provided you have developed a customer relationship with trust and honesty as its foundation.
Not everyone behaves like a rapper who just signed his first contract. There are rich people who won't blink an eye before approving a repair list at a dealer. Even well to do people of more modest means will understand the importance of relatively inexpensive preventative maintenance. A car is almost as indispensable as electricity or plumbing unless you want to ride public transit. Calling up the tow truck is inconvenient at best and expensive at worst. Cars are no longer as cheap and disposable as they used to be with the average vehicle mileage and years of service count rising. People are expecting vehicles to last longer.The majority of the public is the wrong type of customer.
You have a theoretical $100 to spend. Do you - replace 15yo acidic coolant slowly eating the cooling system alive? Or, buy $100 sunglasses to show how cool, hip, and affluent you are? Nothing like fresh tire shine on bald tires. Maybe in the great white north, the average IQ is actually 100.
IMO if he is flat-rate, he should have every reason and right to do whatever he wants with his time. Lots of the local places here think flat rate guys still need to be taking out trash and scrubbing floors for $0/hour while they wait for their next 0.2 LOF/Rotate WAITER.This is a fascinating thread. Even more so considering the opening post that kicked it off.
So much of what mechanics do can’t be done by a robot.
I took me years to get to the point where I could afford to turn down work. No, I am not in the trades.
Working in a dealership, or a chain has got to be difficult. Not an old man’s game IMO.
Problem is, they start on the lube-rack at $25k a year.Most places don't want cars diagnosed properly. They want the car in and out. Most people selling the work have never turned a wrench. I could go on and on, as others on here have. Cars are more complicated today, and many coming out of trade schools don't know the fundamentals, or have any mechanical ability. They are told in school, that they can make 100k a year. It is possible if you are fed, or you do unnecessary services, and cheating customers. Many mech/techs, are given a bad name for the idiots out there. There are those very knowledgeable techs who CAN make 100k, those aren't the idiots I am talking about.