I believe that you did think the discount should be passed on in your opening post.
Nope. Not at all. My opening post questioned what folks thought a
reasonable markup was. When I first posted, I wasn't even complaining about a markup in general, just what would be a reasonable markup.
To re-iterate, the most expensive walk-in retail charge for the part locally was the O'Reilly next door to them, for $68.99, yet they charged $97.15 for the part.
I know for a fact they paid under $40 for the part, due to their discount. Not once did I suggest that I think I should have gotten the part for their cost, I only noted that, for what they charged me, I could have bought 4 of them, almost 5 of them, from Amazon or RockAuto.
And, that's assuming they didn't lie to me, and actually bought a Moog part, rather than a knock-off using the same part number - the invoice doesn't say Moog, that was something that we talked about on the phone when they told me that they weren't going to be able to repair as scheduled, and we had to wait a day.
I'm trusting that they installed Moog, and not something cheaper.
I'd be curious where the bottom line is on this repair. Did they give you a break on time and make it up on parts but the bottom line is equivalent to what another shop would charge. Was the part in town or did they have to make a run to Albany to fetch the part? Did you question why the markup was so much allowing them to maybe correct a mistake?
The part was not in their stock, which they claim they normally stock (not Moog, specifically, but a comparable quality brand, that I don't remember).
The part was not in stock locally, either in Lebanon, or Albany/Corvallis, or at any of their branches in those neighboring towns.
They purchased the part at the O'Reilly next door/across the street, who did not have it in stock, and had to put it on their freight order for arrival the next morning.
I didn't comparison shop at this point, because the car was just in for an alignment. I normally use a shop in Albany for alignments, but since Schwab's can do it local, and I was already in their for a flat repair and they pointed out some premature wear due to alignment (and ultimately, the bad tie-rod issue), I just decided to have it done there.
Ultimately, I'm not really annoyed at the total cost of the repair, nor was I complaining about that:
$193.14, broken down on invoice as:
Invoice said:
$95.99 - INNER TIEROD SOCKET ON RACK & PINION - INSTALLATION
$97.15 - EV455 INNER TIE ROD
That was, if not the exact price quoted before I dropped the car off, damned close, and probably about the same as most anywhere else, I'd imagine.
And, honestly, if I didn't have an itemized invoice, I can't say that I'd really care, either.
Really, it's not the end cost, it's what I consider the shady parts markup practice - and, as evidenced by
BOTH sides in this thread - those that don't like the practice, and those that are going ******* defending the practice, it seems like a much easier time to be had by all if the parts markup didn't exceed retail pricing, and other "OMG WE HAVE TO CHARGE TO STAY IN BUSINESS!!!" costs were wrapped into the labor.
As I said in my original post:
I certainly understand some parts markup, so, as a forewarning, I'm not griping about parts being marked up in general. That's the price you pay, literally, for having a shop do the work instead of doing it yourself.
Ultimately, it's all on me, and I realize that.
I was busy, I needed/wanted the car by the start of the weekend, and I wasn't able to wait until the weekend to do the job myself (for a total expense of $21.79 plus a couple hours of my time) because of that need.
For all of the folks in this thread, defending the markup, and for all of their complaints of us "cheap" customers who ***** about parts markup, and can't afford a repair shop anyways (seriously, WTF?), I fail to see how it wouldn't just be easier all around to either not itemize and tell the customer what they paid for the part, or to shift that markup into labor costs, but, hey, if I knew more, I'd open a repair shop that puts an above-retail markup on parts that I manufactured myself in the back room, out of machines I built myself to manufacture those parts, so I could make tons of money and take my own steaks to the restaurant and have them cook them (or some other version of an argument created by a preschooler).