tractor240
New member
- Joined
- Apr 24, 2026
- Messages
- 19
- Tractor
- Massey 240
So my car mechanic of 15 years closed down and being a small rural place the choice of mechanics isn't great and as time goes on, they are getting fewer.
I thought I found a new mechanic some distance from here until the second visit.
I asked him to do a thorough check-over of my turbo diesel car.
Despite the engine oil being at slightly below the max marker, he overfilled the engine oil well above the max and instead of using 15w-40 he used 10w-30, which I had always thought was meant for mowers etc. Not only that, he had no idea what oil I had in there whether it was mineral or synthetic so he had no idea if he was mixing oils, which is not a good idea so I was once told by a Castrol tech. So now, I have too much oil and a mix of oils I shouldn't be risking, plus I have to pay for this unnecessary oil.
Then he filled up the radiator expansion tank which was already at the correct level, so I have paid $30 for coolant I don't need and I don't know what color because he said he couldn't see inside the tank to see what coolant was in there and how much (though a torch would have solved that). That coolant will just expand into the overflow tube when hot and be dumped out.
He charged me an additional $10 for workshop consumables though he was only doing a check over....there almost certainly weren't any workshop consumables.
So I feel that with the oil, the coolant and the 'consumables', he might as well have just stolen the $50 out of my wallet. So now I have to replace all the oil and the coolant.
Whilst I'm sure he thought he was being thorough, I think these are amateur mistakes. So I'm wondering if he is just a young guy who until setting up in business, enjoyed working on his own and friends cars without a proper training. If that's the case, he could do some serious harm to my car which I have cherished for the last 15 years,
Should I keep looking for another mechanic because these are warning signs of someone who doesn't know enough about what they are doing or risk it and give this guy another chance?
I thought I found a new mechanic some distance from here until the second visit.
I asked him to do a thorough check-over of my turbo diesel car.
Despite the engine oil being at slightly below the max marker, he overfilled the engine oil well above the max and instead of using 15w-40 he used 10w-30, which I had always thought was meant for mowers etc. Not only that, he had no idea what oil I had in there whether it was mineral or synthetic so he had no idea if he was mixing oils, which is not a good idea so I was once told by a Castrol tech. So now, I have too much oil and a mix of oils I shouldn't be risking, plus I have to pay for this unnecessary oil.
Then he filled up the radiator expansion tank which was already at the correct level, so I have paid $30 for coolant I don't need and I don't know what color because he said he couldn't see inside the tank to see what coolant was in there and how much (though a torch would have solved that). That coolant will just expand into the overflow tube when hot and be dumped out.
He charged me an additional $10 for workshop consumables though he was only doing a check over....there almost certainly weren't any workshop consumables.
So I feel that with the oil, the coolant and the 'consumables', he might as well have just stolen the $50 out of my wallet. So now I have to replace all the oil and the coolant.
Whilst I'm sure he thought he was being thorough, I think these are amateur mistakes. So I'm wondering if he is just a young guy who until setting up in business, enjoyed working on his own and friends cars without a proper training. If that's the case, he could do some serious harm to my car which I have cherished for the last 15 years,
Should I keep looking for another mechanic because these are warning signs of someone who doesn't know enough about what they are doing or risk it and give this guy another chance?
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