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Chat => Sports, Hobbies & Motors => Topic started by: Vini on May 15, 2006, 15:40:03 PM

Title: Car Servicing?
Post by: Vini on May 15, 2006, 15:40:03 PM
Best place to get your car serviced is: .....
Title: Car Servicing?
Post by: brummie on May 15, 2006, 15:43:47 PM
Quote from: ViniBest place to get your car serviced is: .....

im not sure but a better place to ask maybe here:
http://www.tekforums.co.uk/forums/show/8.page
Title: Re:Car Servicing?
Post by: Vini on May 15, 2006, 16:06:57 PM
effort :d
Title: Re:Car Servicing?
Post by: Cypher on May 15, 2006, 16:51:25 PM
A local garage imo.  More especially so if there are any specialised ones in your area.

Im lucky to have one 10 mins down the road for me that are Renault Specialists.  I tried them out and they were very helpful and open.  Price was neither Fantastic or a rip-off, just good.
Title: Re:Car Servicing?
Post by: Beaker on May 15, 2006, 17:07:32 PM
if its just a basic service do it yourself :\
Title: Re:Car Servicing?
Post by: Vini on May 15, 2006, 17:44:59 PM
Quote from: Beakerif its just a basic service do it yourself :\

My lights work
My brakes work
My car starts

is that a pass?

I work in IT, not mechanics.
Title: Re:Car Servicing?
Post by: mr_roll on May 15, 2006, 17:57:52 PM
Personally Id get a manual for your car, like a haynes manual, from ebay for about Ã,£5 and not Ã,£16 in halfrauds.

Do the simple things, to save money really and to learn new things. If you dont want to do that then, maybe a local garage, as a few people what garage theyd recomend.

I have confidence in the garage I used to work at, so Ill go there as my dad recomends a different one but I dont have confidence in them.

Title: Car Servicing?
Post by: Serious on May 15, 2006, 18:20:06 PM
Quote from: ViniBest place to get your car serviced is: .....

By asking in the right place, thread moved
Title: Re:Car Servicing?
Post by: Beaker on May 15, 2006, 18:23:14 PM
Quote from: Vini
Quote from: Beakerif its just a basic service do it yourself :\

My lights work
My brakes work
My car starts

is that a pass?

I work in IT, not mechanics.
i also work in IT, but if you can read a manual you can also service a car. :\

If its just oil, water, plugs and filters then its about an hours work.  
Title: Re:Car Servicing?
Post by: Cypher on May 15, 2006, 19:26:12 PM
TBH, im sure I could learn how to do it.  But I feel a lot more comfortable letting a garage do the work than me tinkering under the bonnet.  Im sure thats teh case for many people.
Title: Re:Car Servicing?
Post by: Clock'd 0Ne on May 15, 2006, 20:43:42 PM
Quote from: CypherTBH, im sure I could learn how to do it.  But I feel a lot more comfortable letting a garage do the work than me tinkering under the bonnet.  Im sure thats teh case for many people.

It certainly is. Not everyone wants to get caked in oil and filth and spend an hour pouring through a Haynes manual and trying to find the right tools for something that would take a genuine mechanic no time at all.

Ill check and top up, but Im less inclined to go twiddling more than that. If time is money, it can cost someone else their time and Ill put up the money.
Title: Re:Car Servicing?
Post by: mr_roll on May 15, 2006, 23:20:00 PM
Quote from: Clockd 0NeIt certainly is. Not everyone wants to get caked in oil and filth and spend an hour pouring through a Haynes manual and trying to find the right tools for something that would take a genuine mechanic no time at all.

Myself and Alan spent around 4 - 5 hrs last saturday doing exactly that and then we started work on my car :P
Title: Re:Car Servicing?
Post by: Beaker on May 15, 2006, 23:38:43 PM
Quote from: Clockd 0NeIt certainly is. Not everyone wants to get caked in oil and filth and spend an hour pouring through a Haynes manual and trying to find the right tools for something that would take a genuine mechanic no time at all.

Ill check and top up, but Im less inclined to go twiddling more than that. If time is money, it can cost someone else their time and Ill put up the money.
huh?  basic service is no effort.  Plus if its the difference of Ã,£75 and Ã,£15 for changing my brake pads then ill do it myself.  Only thing i wont touch is a gerbox overhaul, because that takes specialist tooling and skills i dont have.  For almost everything else i have the tools.  Modern cars sometimes need a pro mechanic, but for general service parts and some major fixes there isnt any major problems if you have a spare afternoon and you arent doing anything.
Title: Re:Car Servicing?
Post by: Pete on May 15, 2006, 23:55:03 PM
it aint rocket science:

Stuff required:

Air Filter (http://www.knfilters.co.uk/)
Spark/glow plugs (http://www.spark-plugs.co.uk/)
Oil (http://www.oil.com/)

The guy in Halfords will tell you exactly what Stuff to get for your car. (20minutes)

Tools:

Sump plug spanner
Plug Wrench
Jack
Oil catch pan

Method:

1) cover ground under engine with tarp/bin bags (saves messing up the driveway). (2mins)

2) Locate air filter box. Take cover off and swap old filter for new. (3mins)

3) Remove old sparkplugs. Fit new ones. Do one at a time so you dont mix the HT leads up. (10mins)

4) Warm engine up. Turn engine off. Place oil pan under the sump plug. (Jack car up if req). Take sump plug off. (5mins)

5) Clean end of sump plug while the oil drains away. Make cuppa tea. (5mins)

6) Refit sump plug & fill engine with oil. (5mins)

7) Dispose of used oil safely at local tip. (10mins)

Refitting is the reverse of the above.
Title: Re:Car Servicing?
Post by: Cypher on May 16, 2006, 00:09:43 AM
Quote from: sdpit aint rocket science:

No one said it was.

Some people could lie under the car, or tinker under the bonnet all day. The rest of us just want to leave it to someone else.
Title: Re:Car Servicing?
Post by: Clock'd 0Ne on May 16, 2006, 00:28:03 AM
So spend an afternoon doing all that, after purchasing:

Air Filter
Spark/glow plugs
Oil
Sump plug spanner
Plug Wrench
Jack
Oil catch pan
tarp/bin bags for the driveway
Jack - possibly!

and spend time going down the tip with the oil (which, funnily enough is about 5 mins away - for most it wont be).

Id imagine after Ive bought all the toys and taken the time out it would have been easier and not much cheaper to pay the machanic.

Yeah the tools, etc are there for next time if you do all that, but I dont want to spend my free time toying with cars to save a few quid, so its not for me.
Title: Re:Car Servicing?
Post by: Pete on May 16, 2006, 00:51:19 AM
fair dos :)
Title: Re:Car Servicing?
Post by: Serious on May 16, 2006, 01:16:45 AM
Someone put up a useful comparison thread between men and women on this but I cant be bothered to find it ATM