dealers and service work

TCALZ06

Well-Known Member
Is it common for shops to give to back your bike without cleaning off oil ect after service? I had my 5k service done today and there was oil everywhere

What about screwing up your fill plugs? my fill plug and drain plug for the tranny look like someone who never worked on one of these before used the wrong size wrench.


Is this kind of stuff common and who can I contact at BDM about this?
 

surferdude

dry docked
:angry: We should always do a walk-around before and after. I didn't do it and I got a big gouge in my front fender and I know they did it but I was home by the time I realize it. Bummer ... at least your's is a little cheaper to fix ... but that's bad bad customer service not matter what the cost is ... I feel for you ...:loony: :rant: :spank: :bang:
 

Dakotabos

Well-Known Member
Calendar Participant
Troop Supporter
TCALZ06

What did you go to Hacienda in Scottsdale?
Because THEY SUCK when they worked on my Big Dog a year ago or so:loony:
 

KnotSo

Admin
Staff member
Our dealer does the svc work while we talk to him and watch / lend a hand if needed. Then he cleans up and then they wash and dry it. And off we go.
 

TCALZ06

Well-Known Member
I would have done a walk around but it was closing time. The dealer is Arizona Victory and out of my 4 trips there two have been bad. They told me 3 hours
it took 7 and no phone call no appology. I told them I would wait for it but ended up leaving.
Do I have to go to a BDM dealer to keep the warranty in place if I keep the receipts of the service work? There is a local shop that will let you watch and I want to try them. Arizona Victory seems to have a lot of turn over and they appear to be using young mechanics from MMI
 

Fibersnake

Banjo Playing PsychoBilly
Unfortunately the experience you indicated is not the target but is becoming more commong with not MC shops, but many service, be it auto, apliance, etc.

Just poor ass poor service and professionalism.

I have been lucky with my dealer, for they do clean their mess from service and do so properly. In addition they seem to have the proper tools and will not do the classic crescent wrench and hammer for 90% of work with vise grips for the other 10%. They do seem to care about their quality and most of the technician have invested in the proper tools so that you do not get one using a close metric for the SAE.

Regardless of being lucky, I make it a habit of always checking over the bike when droping it off and more importantly doing a very close check of the area that were worked on and a general inspection of everything else. Best advice to all is to make sure that you do not get there at closing and then take the time to inspect while still at the shop with the tech, and any issue bring them up then. Also once things are looking good, if you get on the road and put in a few miles and something does not seem, feel or sound right, take it back immediatly and dicsuss your concerns.

Another tip, is that when you visit the shop, take a look around and see how their work spaces are. Are the benches clean, tools organized, rags stored, does it look like they have the proper shop equipment such as a real air compressor and not the home small Craftsmen unit. Is there organized libary and reference or do the SM manuals lay around all over the place with coffee stains, torn pages, is the computer piled under dirty uniforms or covered up with paint overspray. Are bikes that are being worked on or torn down having parts put away in labeld bins or bags, no mixing of one bike with others? Is there clean floors or are oil spots everywhere, spider webs in every corner like no one has done a shop cleaning in years, etc.

The shop condition and organization IMHO will give many a good idea of how they will deal with your investment.
 
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