Ian Raleigh":2f7lf826 said:
What about a mate who snapped two spokes in the rear wheel of a modern Mavic Ksyrium wheel,
they declined to replace the spokes & tru' the wheel, but instead gave him a price for a whole new
wheel & cassette at some £300, yet three spokes was just £10 and he didn't want a new cassette neither.
Not about keeping customers happy these days, there's no soul or compassion with modernday bike shops.
as i have recently started my shop i'd like to think that people don't think that of me, i realise the above is a generalisation but even so the last sentence is very sweeping, i specialise in repair so i do actually try and repair things but when they are dead they are dead, i don't sell bikes and because of this i encourage people to repair their bikes as opposed to replace but i'm honest enough to be upfront when their bike is past financial economic repair so only suggest a rebuild then if they are attached to it.
what i would say is like any situation there's issues on both sides, and retailers and customers alike are guilty of annoying each other, the guy that always wants discount but only ever buys the hard to find tiny part to fix his bike that he bought mail-order but in real terms he's only in the shop because he doesn't how to identify which is the part he needs otherwise he'd have bought it online, the miserable sales guy who has become jaded by having to have to haggle with every customer comparing the shop price to the online price, the worn out mechanic who gets paid bugger all because his job isn't seen as a "skill", the greedy shop owner who made his fortune in the early 90's when mountain biking hit big and now just wants to financially rape every customer, i'm not blaming either side but i would say it's a combination of the modern world of retail in general that we now live in, some shops have accepted the online world, some haven't, some shops train their staff mechanically, others don't, my advice is find a good shop/mechanic and don't take them for granted, don't batter them too much on price and if you're thinking of buying mail order just do it and don't use their knowledge to avoid paying their in shop retail price, the shop guys would rather see you with a new bit of kit you've bought mail order than spend time trying to sell you the same thing in store and get battered on the price match if that's the type of customer you could be.
it's not a perfect world from either side of the counter, since starting my little business i have paid myself a total of £1200, that's in 14 months, but i enjoy what i'm doing and hopefully this year will settle into a sensible wage now that all the set up costs are done, i hope i don't become jaded by customers who think they know better than my 20 years experience versus their 5 minutes of google search.
mini rant over, not specifically a rant at you though Ian, just your last sentence really as i don't feel that's fair to me and all the shop owners and employees who do give a crap!
back to the original post though, that is a halfords repair by someone who isn't trained and has attempted to do their best(?) but has failed miserably. we all know that there are good and bad halfords, this one is obviously one of the poorer ones.