What is a reasonable labor charge (flat-rat) to change out a transfer case in a 2001 Tahoe?

Asked by Bill Apr 13, 2015 at 04:50 PM about the 2001 Chevrolet Tahoe LT 4WD

Question type: Maintenance & Repair

Wondering how much I can expect to get charged (# of hours) on my 2001 Tahoe, 5.3 V8,
to change out the transfer case with a used unit.

7 Answers

50,715

Define reasonable? There is a given time set for the work. Multiply that time with the cost per hour. Joe's fix it all shop may be able to do it for less, but there is a reason his boys are not working where they can get more money. If you want to not have issues, go to a reliable place that offers a written guarantee. Sometimes spending more to fix it is really cheaper in the long run. Start with a Chevy dealer for the cost and go from there to compare pricing. If I know of a great garage to do the work and they are honest and reliable, and cost less, then I go there. Sometimes I go to the dealer for the expert work.

2 people found this helpful.
10

No way to know. MOST shops charge according to a flat rate that is usually three- four times the actual time it takes to do the job-hence you are paying for their time to BULL-shit, drink coffee, play with the secretary, jack-off, or take a nap under the car at your expense. Times charged are not honest work times. A decent mechanic will be able to beat flat rate times by 50- 75 percent and still get rich doing it. What it amounts to is you are paying for their $ 30,000 Hot Rod as wellas making them a good living

1 people found this helpful.
160

I have been ase certified for 44 yrs and ive seen these cheap skate customers who think auto repairs should be cheap priced , id like to see them spend their money on all the tools needed and the expense of their time to learn to properly repair things and get paid hardly nothing for their labor.

16 people found this helpful.
50,715

werewolf56, I agree. If you are having eye surgery, would you trust a person that got his degree in Granada last year, or one from Harvard Medical School and has done several thousand surgeries, but charges more? As there are good professionals, and bad ones, so go the car repair business. You get what you pay for. Most failures today or replacement parts is due to the lack of quality control in China. I will pay more for repair parts that are top shelf, and not worry about failure, than saving a few dollars ad getting a less quality part. Past experience has shown, it costs way more in the long run. Even parts that are rebuilt, seem to be done out of the US borders and are usually junk when returned. hoza1126, if you get this, let us know what happened in 2015 on your repair.

1 people found this helpful.
30

A medical doctor, the parts are always located in the same place, one computer located on top of the neck, he can ask his client where it hurts, he buries his mistakes, sanitary Heated and cooled work areas, basically works on two models, pedals drugs. Automotive Technician, 3000 different models 60 plus computers (modules) located anywhere, daily study to keep updated $30K in tools, poor working conditions, inadequate compensation, poor community image.

3 people found this helpful.

Bushwhacked. I worked flat rate more then once. We don't have time to BS and do the time that is alloted for the job. We earn honest wage for honest work. Certified technicians make 25 to 30 dollars an hour. probably less the bushwhacked is making. The shop owner or dealership do made good money. But they have a lot of overhead and money invested. Try it before you are so quick to criticize.

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