tssdetailing
New member
Scottwax said:I've had to refuse to take care of a car in the past after meeting the customer. I was contacted by a construction firm about a Civic that had some cement overspray on it. I went out to look at the car and it was a mid 90s single stage, badly faded white Civic. I talked to the lady who owned the car and found her to be a very unpleasant person in general and had unrealistic expectations about what I was going to do vs what the construction firm was willing to pay for. Basically, she was expecting me to bring the finish to showroom condition. The construction firm was only paying for a wash, cement removal and rewaxing. I told them there was no way I was going to be able to do a good job because this woman had allowed her car to become so oxidized. Any waxing was going to leave streaks all over the car and there was a high likelyhood the chemical that TOL sells for concrete overspray would stain the paint since it contains a green dye for coloring.
The woman refused to pay to have the paint polished and was ranting and raving about the concrete (which I understood) and that the construction firm should pay for everything her car needed or I should take care of that on my own. I told her I am not employed by the construction firm, I was an independent contractor and I don't eat costs on jobs like this. I also told her if I did the work she would have to sign a waiver so that I would not be held liable for any staining the concrete removal product may cause. She got pissed off at me over that, but like I told her, it wasn't my fault she had let her paint deteriorate to the point it looked like chalk. She kept jawing at me, so I told her she needed to work it out with the construction firm and find someone else to do the work and walked away.
When the construction firm called me to find out what happened, I told them what she had said and that she wasn't the type of person I wanted to deal with. Never heard back from them or her.
wow. Good for you, man!