As to paying for a shop to ç”°lean up a saw...not my style, but to each their own. Easy money for the shop/tech and if there is a demand for the service...
What I don稚 understand is complaining about labor of $95 an hour? Again, this is highly regional - but 70-100 is �ypical? My question is how much do the complainers feel is a fair rate for a professional to charge.
That rate covers tech, overhead and training. So let痴 say a tech isn稚 self employed- works for the dealer - annual salary - say 35k per year and health insurance (that痴 probably just below the US median wage). Say the tech gets 2 weeks vacation - so works 2k hours per year, 35k is $17.50 an hour. Health insurance varies, but say 500 monthly...so another 3 bucks an hour. So for every hour the tech works - the shop pays about $20.00.
Of course there痴 努aste - maybe it痴 a slow day and the shop only does 6 hours work - but the tech still gets paid for 8. Let痴 not even factor that though.
Space/tools and training don稚 come cheap. A tech making 35k a year isn稚 coming in with all those things - so you can plan on spending $15 an hour in operating cost - minimum.
So right now your at a fixed cost of $35-40 an hour for a 1 man repair shop - before you make a dime. Yes, $40 leaves a big markup over $95 you charge - but also keep in mind your not getting $95 on ALL those repairs. Warranty work, service plans and corporate/govt work all drive volume - but pay about 2/3 or less per hour as they can negotiate their volume into a discount.
Then you have the inevitable 5% of your work thatç—´ going to be done gratis. Good customer service sometimes means bending over backwards to handle a problem.
For all this trouble - your probably clearing $125,000 to $150,000 per tech in an operation charging $95 an hour - and that tech and overhead cost you in the neighborhood of $85 to 100k. Still - easy money right? After taxes your clearing 10-25k - and risking 8-10x that figure potentially. Still think those shops are å*µreedy?