It's a fact of life that business is business, and to expect better
than to be treated with contempt is to ask to be disappointed. We're
almost proud of the lack of respect we receive from the business
community, each new tale of outrage reminding us that we deserve no
better. My daily reading of
The
Consumerist blog is a reminder that someone's always getting
screwed; just be glad it's not you!
So, being the anxious consumer I am when things go wrong, I faced a
leaky tire on my not yet two year old Camry Hybrid with something less
than sangfroid. I didn't notice the problem; the car did. But, being
at least a little prepared for such things, I determined which tire
was low with my trusty digital pressure gauge (it was the right rear)
and then pulled out my electric pump to reinflate it. And monitored
the situation for a while, until time and complacency took its toll.
A few weeks later the warning light went on again. Same tire of
course, which I duly inflated. A few weeks after that I brought my
car in for service, which includes a tire rotation. So I guess I was
waiting for the day that warning was set off by my now right
front tire. Which happened Sunday morning, and which finally
forced me to deal with the problem.
The car came with Michelins, so I went Googling for a Michelin dealer
in my area. Found one too, but kept looking after I read a review
that had absolutely nothing positive to say about them. A second one
in nearby Los Altos sounded promising, and so I took a drive over this
morning. I gave them the short version of the story (lucky them, I'm
sure you're thinking), and wondered how much effort they'd put into
finding such a tiny and slow leak. I'd read a bunch of customer
reports, you see, and knew if they didn't find it quickly, they'd be
after me to replace the tire. Or maybe they wouldn't even try...
I guess these guys didn't read consumer complaints like I did, because
they spent 15 or 20 minutes inspecting the tire and applying soapy
water and listening carefully, at which point they found the leak.
Took the tire off the rim, repaired it, reassembled it all and charged
me nothing. Zero. Zip. Okay, they did ask for my business when I
need new tires. Which, in response to my question about how soon
that would be, will likely be another fifteen or twenty thousand
miles.
I hardly know what to think. Don't these guys know about the lack of
courtesy we expect? Don't they talk to the people at Sears and all
the other repair hells who cheat their customers every chance they
get?
What's right with this picture? And why am I so shocked?
(Oh, and if you need a good place in the Bay Area for Michelin or
Goodyear, I think I can make a recommendation...)