I forgot to mention he would do it himself, but he has a back problem and thats why he was inclined to ask someone else to do this.
DaGonz said:
I don't understand the three trips to his house thing....
Apparently, he wants me to come to his and wash the car with him, clay bar with him, and mask the tape off. I don't understand why I would do this if he were going to be doing this with me?
He doesn't let anyone but himself wash the car, no dealer, etc. So this may explain that.
The second trip will be the polishing part, and then applying his sealant on and letting it sit for overnight. I would then come back and buff it off and apply his wax lol.
Holden_C04 said:
It may have something to do with the way he normally does his vehicle. I don't like to see clients with tons of requests. It makes me think that no matter how perfect the job will be, they won't be satisfied.
I explained this too him, he's not expecting miracles but as someone said my reputation is on the line as well. I'm a perfectionist and if I can't deliver the best I can physically do then I feel I have failed my job. He told me its rather "mostly a maintenance thing that's just due" rather than a full restoration.
TH0001 said:
I would walk away. You are the expert and it is up to you to tell him what you are going to use to make his paint perfect. He is bringing you in as the expert, otherwise he would do it himself. Why would somebody who can't do it himself be telling you how to do your job. I wouldn't go to a doctor and tell him what medicine to use on me. I would expect the doctor to hear my concerns, assuage my feelings and take them into consideration, then as the expert prescribe the proper treatment.
Does this make sense?
If he has the experience to estimate how much time it is going to take you, then why isn't he doing himself.
If you deciede to go through with this, tell him you do not guaranette the results with his products as you often have to change combinations to custom fit your process to the paint and its needs. Charge him by the hour (and no less then 50, IMO) and to car will deterime how much time you need.
If he wants to work with in a budge (say 300 dollars at 50/hr) then give him the best you can in 6 hours, with out doing extra's.
I appreciate your response Todd. That's exactly how I was thinking.
2002 Z06 said:
I vote for hourly rate also
JonP said:
I vote hourly also, but if it we're me, I wouldn't do his cars if I don't use my own tools/products.
weekendwarrior said:
If you are posting on the professional forum, I assume you are set up as a business, and are possibly insured. I would tell him for liability reasons, I only felt comfortable using the products and techniques that I had experience with from my own arsenal - I would go on to tell him that I don't like to experiment on customers cars, and that's essentially what he would have you doing using products you aren't familiar with. I would also tell him that I charge by the hour, and will be much more efficient using products I am use to.
If he still insists, I would move on to the next customer. This guy has already raised too many red flags, in my opinion, that lead me to believe he will be more trouble than he is worth. I think you could do a killer job on the car with your own products, and he will still probably badmouth you to other people and say things like, "He did a good job, but not as good as if he had used my products."
Actually the exact opposite, I do this as a hobby, and didn't know where to post this question at. I appreciate all the responses on this forum and value each opinion on here. All these different variables are making me fell pretty uncomfortable.
I'm actually going to see his car Thursday night at a meet and I'll examine what needs to be done, if its a long shot, I'm going to bail and not waste my time.
Thanks again for the responses guys
