sberry
Banned
I wanna revisit this scenario in a year.
I am not a mechanic by trade but I am building a 4 or 5 bay auto repair garage within the next 6 months. I almost have the land, after that I will build and then begin my shop.
I have good friends who gave me a great quote on building a block building. I have been tossing the idea of a steel building to others..but they say for the long haul I should go with block.??
I will be doing tires, brakes, and alignments along with all major and minor repairs. The only aspect I think I will not be doing is exhaust, since the demand seems pretty low and the bending machine is $7000.
I think 1 two post lift and 1 four post lift is good for starters. I am looking at the Atlas Line right now for affordability.
For the tire changer and balancer I am looking at the Atlas Combo also for affordability.
I am up in the air about the brake lathe. I am leaning towards an on the car brake lathe (Ranger). I know I wont be able to do drums with this setup.
How many air compressors will I need? Are the atlas products good enough?
I also have to figure out which time estimation guide I will use. Chiltons seems to be the most advertised.
Do I need special software to do invoicing or can I use quickbooks?
Any input from guys who run auto repair shops?
For what its worth I am doing this because it has always been a dream of mine to operate a 'good garage' it will be located in a very high traffic area with very little competition.
Any info or help or input will help.
Unless you find some good master mechanics, you will be in WAY over your head. Once you are in business you will learn you cannot undercut your competitions prices and still afford to be in business. Insurance for an auto repair garage is expensive, as well as workman's comp. insurance, shop upkeep, tools, pay roll,etc...........etc..............you might be surprised how little an honest garage makes even at what you percieve as high prices. You need talent, you cannot make any money if don't really know what you are doing, you will lose money. I am curious on the $10s of thousands of electronic equipment? The garage that I personally get all of my work done only has virtually no electronics except for an OBDII scanner. He will do everything except for tires/alignments.
The local garages that I am competing with are below his shop.. so what electronics will I need?
I currently own several businesses, just not an auto repair shop. I am dependent on labor at those with equipment operators, drivers and mechanics.
I do not doubt that the labor is what drives any business.. without good labor nothing will work.
If you have done/doing research about this type of business and you still want to do it go for it. I worked at a tire store in the mid 90's and made minimum wage and so it a lot of people there.In todays job market people will be happy to make $10.00 a hr.One thing you may want to think about if you have a community college talk to the body shop teachers and see if they have any students to recommend to hire,etc.good luck
But not all car rotors are going to be that cheap. I would venture to guess those "cheap" rotors will cause a lot of comebacks and headaches. A lot people are'nt going to spend several hundred dollars on new when they can get them resurfaced for around $80.
The only mechanic you can get for 10/hr. is the type that gives the business a bad name. There are NO high end mechanics that would take a leak in a garage for 10/hr.........................it is 2009 people! Jeez
All depends where you live. Some places $10/hr is good $$.

I did not mean to insult anyone with the $10 per hour. In this area $10 per hour is 'pretty fair' right now. A CDL truck driver wage is $8 to $12/hr. Mechanic is $8 to $10 an hour at the job service. The best mechanic that I know personally works at a used car dealership that a friend of mine runs. He gets tossed every thing you can imagine that they bring in from auctions. From changing motors to installing dashboards that are laid in the trunk. He has been a mechanic for 30 years and he makes $400 a week. Its just the way it is here.
I like the idea of specializing.. but there is a true demand for honest work and fair prices here. I am not hoping for new car warranty work, nor the high end diagnostics.. I just want to build relationships with the average joe that didnt get to do the Cash for Clunkers program..and has to rely on his 15 year old car to get to work every day to feed his family. The $44.95 oil change guys need to rethink the economy.

Not to tell you how to spend your money, but.......
Don't forget to figure in the value your time and aggravation when calculating your investment.
If it was me and I had the pile of cash that it's gonna take to get this deal up and running, I'd find a guaranteed 5% pot to put it in and sit back and watch it grow. You'll make more money and have alot less heartache.
Hell, if I could get 5% on what you're gonna invest I wouldn't have to go to work on Monday, or ever for that matter.........
I call it all a RobertG!![]()

Oh well, I'm not trying to rain on everyones' parade, I just want to know what planet they live on, where this makes sense. I have been self-employed for so long, maybe I have forgotten, but the pay rates sound like an insult to me.
In 1987, as a teenager, I made 10 bucks an hr. cleaning pools, I cannot imagine any man, 20+ years later being paid so little.![]()
Between this and the guys you will run out of business in the depressed economy I think you should double the size of this shop right off the bat. You will need a couple more men of course.I am not at all worried about opening a dead shop.. in fact we cannot even fathom how we are going to work in the drive ins from the street..since we already have the used car service and the fleet.. not to mention we will grow that aspect as soon as we are operational.
I'm kinda with Autoace here. As I said above, the journeymen mechanics we had made $28/hour - AND THAT WAS 15 YEARS AGO!!!! But maybe Kris lives in Mexico!!!
