BuckeyeChuck
Member
I'm cheap, which means I buy used cars that have lost most of their market value. There are only two kinds of used cars: those that have broken, and those that will break again. Since I'm cheap, I fix the used cars my cheapness compels me to buy. This means I have spent quite a bit of time at the parts counters of various auto parts stores, chief of which are Auto Zone and Advance Auto Parts.
Over the years I've heard a lot of stupid things from the people who man the counters. They don't know me; they don't know if I'm educated, or in what; they don't know how experienced I am, or not; and they don't know how knowledgeable I am about cars. Over time I've learned to keep my mouth more closed than usual when speaking with somebody I don't know, because I might make a fool of myself emphatically saying something erroneous in an area of their expertise. Apparently, auto store parts counter workers lack this insight because over the years I've heard some incorrect and stupid stuff from these guys.
I understand why they do this. They think that working behind an auto parts store counter gives them credibility. They must know what they're talking about because, you know, they work at an auto parts store. Duh. See the brand on the shirt? He *works* there. You just shop there. Never mind that there are decades of cars from scores of manufacturers offering hundreds of models in literally thousands of variations, or that each vehicle has between 3500 and 5500 parts. Just look at the shirt! It tells you all you need to know about the container of automotive part awesomeness who condescends to spend a little of his time helping you purchase a part that you really don't understand anyway. Maybe someday you can work there and get a shirt like his. I know I aspire to this lofty position in life. It's all about the shirt.
I own a 2003 Ford Focus ZX5. It had the factory rotors on it until today, and with 107,XXX miles on the clock, those rotors were pretty ratty. I had procured discs and pads and descended upon my Focus's front wheels about 10:30 AM. Discs and pads should only take about an hour, and that long only because I always work at a leisurely pace. Well, on the right front I attempted to put the new pads in the caliper and they didn't fit. Comparison to the pads just removed showed they were completely different. Huh. How could The Shirt have done this? So, to my displeasure I got in my other car (after completing an oil change I was doing at the same time as the brakes on the Focus) and headed back to the store.
I explained that they didn't fit, showed The Shirt the pads just removed, and said I'd need something that fit. I told The Shirt I wanted semi-metallic pads so whatever he had in semi-metallic that looked like the parts in my bag, that's what I wanted. The Shirt peered down at me and said they didn't have any semi-metallic pads and that I wouldn't be able to find them. I replied "Oh, I bet I will be able to find them." And then The Shirt uttered something that ranks highly on the list of Stupid Things Auto Parts Counter Workers Say:
"Semi-metallic has been discontinued because they are damaging. They damage your car, whch is why most cars come with organic pads."
I admit to a moment of disbelief. What I wanted to say was "Ah, so I see that your shirt came with a degree in mechanical engineering." I would find this comment particularly funny because while I don't have his shirt, I do have a degree in mechanical engineering and actually studied disc brakes as part of a three-quarter machine design course that was part of the core curriculum. But I just scowled and told him I would shop at his competitor because he wanted me to pay $55 for a set of ceramic pads, when what I wanted a $35 set of semi-metallic brake pads. After receiving my money back, I drove 200 yards down the street to their largest national competitor, wherein I found not one, not two, but three variations of semi-metallic pads which looked just like the parts I removed from my car.
Sadly, the tale doesn't end there. I put the LF pads on and secured everything, including the wheel. I went to the RF wheel and inserted the pads, only to have a retaining tab on the outboard pad snap off as I attempted to put a retaining wire clip into its final position. So I disassembled both brakes again, got in my other car again, and got a third set of pads. I'm pleased to say that my Focus has shiny new discs and pads (of the semi-metallic variety) and for my troubles I got to tell this story.
What other stupid things have the shadetree mechanics on this forum heard from the people behind the counter at their parts stores?
Over the years I've heard a lot of stupid things from the people who man the counters. They don't know me; they don't know if I'm educated, or in what; they don't know how experienced I am, or not; and they don't know how knowledgeable I am about cars. Over time I've learned to keep my mouth more closed than usual when speaking with somebody I don't know, because I might make a fool of myself emphatically saying something erroneous in an area of their expertise. Apparently, auto store parts counter workers lack this insight because over the years I've heard some incorrect and stupid stuff from these guys.
I understand why they do this. They think that working behind an auto parts store counter gives them credibility. They must know what they're talking about because, you know, they work at an auto parts store. Duh. See the brand on the shirt? He *works* there. You just shop there. Never mind that there are decades of cars from scores of manufacturers offering hundreds of models in literally thousands of variations, or that each vehicle has between 3500 and 5500 parts. Just look at the shirt! It tells you all you need to know about the container of automotive part awesomeness who condescends to spend a little of his time helping you purchase a part that you really don't understand anyway. Maybe someday you can work there and get a shirt like his. I know I aspire to this lofty position in life. It's all about the shirt.
I own a 2003 Ford Focus ZX5. It had the factory rotors on it until today, and with 107,XXX miles on the clock, those rotors were pretty ratty. I had procured discs and pads and descended upon my Focus's front wheels about 10:30 AM. Discs and pads should only take about an hour, and that long only because I always work at a leisurely pace. Well, on the right front I attempted to put the new pads in the caliper and they didn't fit. Comparison to the pads just removed showed they were completely different. Huh. How could The Shirt have done this? So, to my displeasure I got in my other car (after completing an oil change I was doing at the same time as the brakes on the Focus) and headed back to the store.
I explained that they didn't fit, showed The Shirt the pads just removed, and said I'd need something that fit. I told The Shirt I wanted semi-metallic pads so whatever he had in semi-metallic that looked like the parts in my bag, that's what I wanted. The Shirt peered down at me and said they didn't have any semi-metallic pads and that I wouldn't be able to find them. I replied "Oh, I bet I will be able to find them." And then The Shirt uttered something that ranks highly on the list of Stupid Things Auto Parts Counter Workers Say:
"Semi-metallic has been discontinued because they are damaging. They damage your car, whch is why most cars come with organic pads."
I admit to a moment of disbelief. What I wanted to say was "Ah, so I see that your shirt came with a degree in mechanical engineering." I would find this comment particularly funny because while I don't have his shirt, I do have a degree in mechanical engineering and actually studied disc brakes as part of a three-quarter machine design course that was part of the core curriculum. But I just scowled and told him I would shop at his competitor because he wanted me to pay $55 for a set of ceramic pads, when what I wanted a $35 set of semi-metallic brake pads. After receiving my money back, I drove 200 yards down the street to their largest national competitor, wherein I found not one, not two, but three variations of semi-metallic pads which looked just like the parts I removed from my car.
Sadly, the tale doesn't end there. I put the LF pads on and secured everything, including the wheel. I went to the RF wheel and inserted the pads, only to have a retaining tab on the outboard pad snap off as I attempted to put a retaining wire clip into its final position. So I disassembled both brakes again, got in my other car again, and got a third set of pads. I'm pleased to say that my Focus has shiny new discs and pads (of the semi-metallic variety) and for my troubles I got to tell this story.
What other stupid things have the shadetree mechanics on this forum heard from the people behind the counter at their parts stores?
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