You’re not nitpicking Brian. It’s called doing things right and taking pride in your work. Glad you’re teaching your son these values as well as the repair knowledge.
@Gormen Freeman I might attempt a thread repair or modification before calling a turbo but I haven't had one of those in my hands to see what there is to work with.
As a prior aircraft mechanic, I was always taught that if you're missing the "small things", what else are you missing? You're not nitpicking...it shows a lack of attention to detail and a lot of complacency. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and tips, much appreciated.
I personally performed this job on my own vehicle for this specific reason. I took my time, dedicating four days to the task, meticulously thread chasing and torquing all bolts and studs to the required specifications. If only Brian, who takes immense pride in his work and treats customers' vehicles with utmost care, were closer to my location in NC. I would have gladly paid for his expertise instead of doing it myself. Brian's attention to even the smallest details sets him apart. He treats customers' vehicles as if they were his own, leaving no room for mistakes.
I think that’s part of the issue you appreciate Brian and his expertise because you know him and his reputation. A lot of these guys who are unknown underbid their work to customers and out of panic and frustration rush the job so that they don’t lose their butts on the labor charge. It’s not an excuse for bad work but considering how much volume a lot of shops receive and how cheap and unappreciative a lot of customers are I can see how it happens. I have my own private shop and see this stuff all the time from larger high volume shops all of the time.
@@xXFirstHandGamerMatt And many of us are not "auto mechanics". It might take me four weeks to frame a house where a Carpenter may be able to frame it in four days.
Why can't all Mechanics be like FTM; honest, thorough, no cutting corners, performs the quality of work as if its his own vehicle. FTM you are a good man and excellent mechanic ! Keep up the great videos !
Unfortunately I've seen crap work like that far too often during my over forty year career as a mechanic and that makes all of us look bad. It happens often enough that I can see why people don't trust mechanics in general. I've worked alone in my shop for many years and my customers know how meticulous I am which keeps them coming back. You are obviously the same way, which is refreshing to know I'm not alone. You do great work and I love your videos. Thank you for all the great information.
I don't understand why people do this. I mean I'm not a mechanic, I'm a contractor, but I've done enough mechanic work on my work trucks to know that it's so much more satisfying when parts and everything goes back together looking like it rolled out of the factory. I don't think I could sleep at night knowing my work looked like this...
I've had the good fortune of gaining knowledge from a couple of really good meticulous mechanics in 30 years of tinkering.. I've seen a lot of what not to do mechanics as well.. but I've never seen the I don't care one that's hazardous to our health!
I'm with you on doing a job properly. And I also don't understand why people don't give a damn how well they do something, as long as they get it done. I guess that explains the mentality of Dale Earnhardt fans; not caring how he won the race....just that he won the race. This was more important to them. I had this ingrained in me from my perfectionist father: which is: "Do the job properly, the best you can or don't do it at all." There's no excuse for errors like this. God is watching and He knows who is doing what.
@@terryharvey8627 speak on it. Especially now there are some young kids who want to get into the industry but is really hard to find people that want to real foundational knowledge vs how to get hours and. jobs.
Exactly the reason why I started working on my own cars eons ago. Deep respect for dedicated mechanics like you. Button 'er up good and take pride in your work! Cheers!
I started working on my car because I didn’t have money to pay a shop labor of $100/hr or more. Now I do it because I don’t trust most mechanics, I do have a couple buddies I will get to do stuff I can’t now though. Transmission stuff is pretty much where I draw the line beyond clutch and flywheel stuff.
When I was young man modding Mustangs, me and my friends wouldn't dream of paying of a mechanic to do something like this (even if we did have the money :-)). Where's the fun/pride/respect in that? When someone had a particularly big job going on, we all pitched in whatever we had - time, garage, tools, knowledge, even money. And speaking of knowledge, the internet was already an invaluable resource even tho you couldn't watch a YT video because it didn't exist yet! What is these "professional" mechanic's excuse?
I just wanted to say thank you for all of your videos. I'm a single parent and own 4 expeditions of varying years but all with the 5.4l engine. 2 of them now have well over 300,000 miles and still running like new. Your tips and tricks have helped me repair and maintain these vehicles saving me thousands in repair bills and/or new truck payments full coverage insurance etc. Simply put your videos have literally improved our quality of life. If you're reading this and own a Ford stick with this man's videos and always use motorcraft parts!
I understand that mechanics are under great pressure to get jobs in and out as quickly as possible. Time is money. It takes time to do the job right, and sometimes you're hard press to take that time. One of the many one liners my mentor shared with me 30 years ago is the fact that if you ever feel you don't have time to do the repair right, why would you feel that you have time to do it twice? That one (as well as many others) has stuck with me throughout my entire career. Brian. You are the man buddy!
Wow, this is an example why I do whatever I can at home... I've not seen a hack job like this one in a long time... I wish you would call out these shops to warn people, but understand the possible liability by doing it... You are right about it these places give you all a bad reputation...
@@MrGamerholic Does it matter when you are slapped with a civil suit and have to pay to prove you're telling the truth... Either pay an attorney, or take time off yourself to appear in court... You lose one way or another... For what to say "see I was right..."
@@MrGamerholic So lets go down that path... You go to court and win the civil case... It isn't just that simple but lets assume you take a day off to go to court to clear yourself from false allegations and win... How much did you lose in work for this... Then you turn around and file a counter suit assuming you can because some states don't allow you to do that... But lets say you can... Filing isn't free, process serving isn't free... Now more lost income on top of business because you have court... So lets say you win a judgement and they refuse to pay you... Now what you have to spend even more money and lost work to get your judgement... All of this because you outed a competitors crappy work... At the end of the day if you still think it's worth it then you haven't owned your own business...
Stuff like this is the exact reason I do almost everything on my vehicles. Thanks for the videos! I love watching your stuff. You’re not nitpicking at all. I’ve found that when you get on a piece of equipment and notice seemingly small things like caps which aren’t fastened and coolant out of acceptable range it’s a sign that other things are being missed as well. I sure hope the shop made it right for this guy.
Im a diesel mechanic, with 20 years experience working in the heavy equipment industry. I run into this kind of issue all the time, people take no pride in their work anymore. Sad but true.
I'll tell you one thing, you weren't nit-picking. You have pride in your work unlike other people in this world. That's why you have the following you have and the reputation you have. Don't ever stop nit-picking, these vehicles require that kind of attention to detail I feel; they get more complex and complex and I've always appreciated your ability to navigate us common-folk through the issues these modern-day vehicles can have.
It's one of the reasons I like to do my own work. Now that I'm retired, I do almost 100% of it. Back when I was working, if I was in over my head time-wise, I would give the job to a local shop where I've done business for years. Even then I might still find things, like screws not replaced, a bolt broken, covers not replaced properly. And, the industry is set up to perpetuate this! Nobody allowed in the shop area "for insurance reasons," so there''s no way to check the work. You are expected to pay for the job, sight unseen, and then drive away. This is unheard of in other trades. Imagine having a plumber install a new sink, but you don't get to see it until after you've paid AND the plumber has driven away??? No?, Well that''s how the auto repair business operates, and unscrupulous mechanics. like the clown that worked on this truck, take full advantage of it! Here''s another thing. When you're buying a vehicle, whether new or used, ask them to put it on a lift. They're going to balk, come up with excuses, we can't do that, nobody has ever asked that before, etc. I just tell them, Hey, you're selling six-sided vehicles and I need to see side number six before I buy. I don't bust their chops - asking for this on every vehicle is unreasonable. But if everything else I can see on sides 1 through 5 looks good, and I am serious about it, if they won't show me side #6, I walk
@seananderson127 and they simply assume you can put your daily driver in line with 7 others and wait two to six weeks for them to call with the damages. I'm canceling an appointment today because in 2 weeks I can either fix it or totally destroy it.
All very good points. Right now, my early DI engine probably needs the intake valves walnut blasted. I'd love to just pay somebody, and it'd be trivial to let me see the all-important before/after while the intake manifold is off, but unless I actually take it to @FordTechMakuloco or a handful of others, that just 'aint gonna happen. So, I'll probably end up doing it myself, buying $$ tools I'll only use once (still worth it to me if I can loan them out or use them just once more), but at least I'll know it's done right.
Your output is at an AME level. In fact, you exceed many of the cleanliness practices common in the aviation industry. I suspect that's why you have customers driving in from Texas! Thanks for this video - I'd love to know how it all turns out for the customer. I'd welcome a follow-up some time down the road.
In my opinion you are the best Ford/Mercury/Lincoln mechanic in the country. Your OCD for quality and factory procedures is what customers WANT and DESIRE in a repair. I've watched tons of your videos and you always do a great job. Sadly, so many mechanics just don't care and just want money. I would be scared to take my vehicle to anyone that doesn't have a proven track record.
Brian at FordTechMakuloco, David at CarWizard, EricO at SMA, Scott at Vehcor, and Ray at RainmanRay all seem to strive to do what's best for the customer while running a good business and creating great content. It's got to be a constant balancing act. And each of these guys have posted videos showing having to deal with and correct other shop's stupidity - or crookedness. Hat's off to these fine content creators who help educate (and entertain) us regularly. "There's your dinner!"
@@onenikkione Oh that was a total oversight on my part. Ahmet at The Car Care Nut is fantastic! SO customer focused, striving to to "the right thing" - even if that means giving "tough love" and informing the customer their vehicle is too far gone to repair.
@@lvsqcsl Doh! You caught another one I missed. 100% correct! The brilliant Russian diagnostican. More superb content. We are so lucky to be entertained by all these mechanics!
if i find one thing on my veickle like anything about any of this, thats why im thankfull for FTM to show me every step to do every step myself, correctle, and for reasons! this guys is awesome!
Excellent honest techs should be celebrated! I would be tipping this guy left & right for his EXCELLENT service! My Ford trucks are all super solid. All we buy! I do great basic maintenance..always. Never know maybe in future i will need call Brian. Thankyou sir for what ya do! 💯 -MI
THIS is why I do my own work. Takes me longer and sometimes I have to 'get educated' ala- RUclips University; but I KNOW I got it or WILL get it right.. even when I gotta go back and redo something. I'm so thankful for channels like this. Good luck everybody and Brian, thanks again for making this vid and all your vids.
It's a real shame that there aren't more ethical mechanics out there like you Brian. I hope this customer gets a fair settlement from the previous shop's "work".
same as with every other profession: 80% retrads that don't care and have no pride in their work and aten't going to improve their skills in their lifetime and around twenty that do and are way less retraded... 😽
The experienced and thorough mechanics are driven out and replaced with younger idiots who know nothing about diagnosing and repairing vehicles and have no care about resolving customer concerns and have no respect for the customers' property. It's all about generating more repair orders and getting them closed even if the vehicle comes right back on the flatbed missing a wheel or needing an engine. I see this over and over and over and I flat out refuse to work on any repair order that is a result of express scum destroying something on a customer's vehicle.
It is refreshing to see this video. I have had my own horror story, but involves many mechanics making erroneous diagnostic and repairs over 10 years. I finally found a competent mechanic who listened and fixed the problem. 2003 f150 vacuum loss issue.
Ah a bit of hometown pride here...BD DIesel's head offices and main plant is literally 15 minutes away from where I'm sitting right now here in Abbotsford BC Canada. That said this install leaves a lot to be desired! And BD does make some really nice stuff and it's nice that it's a Canadian company, a lil bit of north of the border goodness.
How long before the fire started? How long drawing in dirty air through the missing sensor port before engine or turbo failure? Per usual Brian FANTASTIC video! I loved how you stressed the word "EVER" while looking over at your son. Great mechanic, great dad.
Thank you for your helpful videos! I went to the Ford dealer for a misfire on a 2001 f150 5.4l and they said they changed all the spark plugs. Well I changed the plugs about a year before but said ok . Long story short every time it rained I would get a misfire on the number 4 cylinder so I pulled the coil pack and found that they broke that plug off and used epoxy and glued the plug and coil pack boot in the hole. The reason I know they broke it off is that the broken plug was a motorcraft and the rest of the plugs were autolite. The dealership went bankrupt because of dealings like this with multiple lawsuits in court.
And this is why I do all my own work even though I am not a mechanic per se. But like you I am OCD about doing it right the first time. My trust in mechanics was over at ten years of age. Bicycle mechanic was supposed to do the 30 day break-in tune up. Got my bike back and the gooseneck was loose in the stem. Almost got clobbered by a lady backing out of her drive when I tried to swerve only to have the bars turn and the bike continue on straight ahead. Thought my dad was gonna kill the shop owner. That started my shade tree wrench wrestling.
I worked as a mechanic in a local bicycle shop and the owner was adamant that every repair was to be road tested! It made us very aware that if you messed up the repair, you were going to be eating pavement.
Oh man that is a botched job. By the looks of it, If they do that poorly on something like this, I'd definitely wouldn't have them change my oil. Who knows if they would even put in the right weight oil or enough oil. Great video Brian, I admire your attention to detail and doing things right the first time.
I hear that,I took my 03 camry to midas for an oil change and the dumbass "tech" broke my upper radiator hose support off while trying to take the oil filter off.760$ to replace.the moron owner admitted it and tried to blame it on the age of the car( nothing was wrong when I brought it in) this happened in Visalia CA.Don't go there.
@@glorgau that's why they have to have shop insurance. usually taking it up the chain(Midas, TBC, etc.) on their corporate Twatter™ account helps way faster. 😏
Thanks for being a genuine mechanic that takes pride in your craft and for passing it on. It's mechanics like you that can help ppl and not just screw them over. never say your nitpicking when your as good as you are... It's a great feeling when one has a good mechanic and can be on the road and trust the ride they have, especially when the person that works on it did a great job and didn't screw them over in one way or another we have children and other loved ones that we take wherever they need to go and it's a shame that we have crappy mechanics doing crappy work apologies i had better words for those mechanics lol
I’m also somewhat OCD and stopped trusting mechanics at shops and dealers probably 25 years ago. I was getting sick to my stomach watching this Brian. Terrible is all I can say. This mechanic/shop needs to be exposed and folks need to be warned to stay away!!!
I am exactly 9 minutes and 38 seconds into this video.I have been doing this for over 35 years 310s and t. You are definitely not nitpicking. When you are done a job it should always look like you were never there, every bracket ,bolt ,clip etc. has a purpose. I have seen so many vehicles come in with hoses rubbing where they shouldn’t and rupturing, or wires chafing etc, all because some backyard guy thought he was an engineer and omitted something that he thought didn’t matter because he was too lazy to put it back. I can’t wait to see what happens when we look underneath when you raise the lift lol. You are definitely my go to for 3v and eco boost. You have saved me so much time and aggravation so many times. Keep up the great work and I thank you .Stay safe and take care
Times are changing Brian Isn’t like when I turned a wrench at the dealer. Took pride in my work because I did not want to get back flagged for the work I did. Need more like you and I’m glad your teaching him the right way.
I think it comes down to 2 things: a lack of integrity and carelessness. I can’t knowingly send a car out the door with a problem I created or didn’t fix properly when I’m being paid to fix a problem. I want to return a safe car that’s running properly to the customer. I try my best to leave no trace and put all the push pins and fasteners back where they are supposed to be. Carelessness is a trap anyone can fall into here and there and accidents happen but if that’s your regular M.O. then you’re in the wrong industry.
Great video and very informative! I don't think he's nitpicking either, it's hard to find great technicians like this man these days, he's just pointing out things that should have been fixed or attended to without a second thought. What I appreciate most from these videos is that they are always reminding me of what a genius I am for not owning any Fords, they really are garbage. The engineering and poor designs makes me sick!
What an absolute shame. Even harder now to undo the botched up mess from the first shop. I can't even imagine the total expense getting this all straightened out. Good luck to the customer getting even any restitution back from the first shop. Thanks for sharing, Brian....
don't know how it works in the US in that case but here, in France, my insurer pays to have the job done after everything has been documented and then they haggle with the shop insurance company 'til both are satisfied with the outcome. i don't pay a single euro and get a fixed car way sooner. 🙄
@@dmitripogosian5084 kinda, it depends on what kind of coverage you've paid for but if your car is not repaired/modified as it should be by a professionnel, they'll have the job redone somewhere else then get the cost paid back by the first shop insurer as a shop has to be insured to be able to do business here. if you have the minimum legal level of insurance for a road worthy vehicles it's your problem though and you'll have to go to court suing the shop and/or its insurance company if the shop is insolvent. hope this clarifies it. 😉
@@kittytrail Interesting, I never heard about that kind of insurance in Canada (actually our system is rather province dependent, so that's a caveat) Even comprehensive insurance means that you are covered for road accidents, and maybe if a tree fell on you, but not if your motor needs to be repaired. Shop insurances that's their business, but if you deal with maintenance I do not believe that my insurance can be involved. I need to check British Columbia, their car insurance is run by government, and there are no options, everybody is covered the same way.
@@dmitripogosian5084 it's not about maintenance, it's about malpractice: a shop does shoddy work on your car, it has a professionnal insurance, your insurer has your car towed, damages are checked by an independent expert whose work is legally admissible and then pays the repairs, you get your car back running fine and they settle every thing with the shop insurance so you don't have to deal with them. a neighbour even had his car insurance cover for a botched wrap job last year. 😉 edit: sorry, it is also about maintenance if a shop does the work as they will settle everything with the shop insurance but not if you do it yourself. a good example is if a shop doing tyres rotation overtorques (over 400Nm instead of 90Nm discovered when trying to remove a wheel after a flat in my case, which can lead to failure and a crash) your bolts or lugnuts they'll step in and work on your behalf before the other party insurer has paid.
You ARE NOT nitpicking. People pay PROFESSIONALS to be professionals and NOT miss things like this and take reassembly shortcuts. They pay what is asked of them to GET GOOD SERVICE. What frosts my cherries is paying good money to get shortcuts and inattention to detail. I would not be pleased to find these issues and I WOULD find them. You did everything right! You are trustworthy.
Good for you and your OCD. It shows why you are a GREAT technician! Like you said, it just gets worse and worse as you go along! I can't believe someone would do such a bad job like that and give it back to a customer!
Excellent presentation on why a vehicle needs to be inspected by an unbiased professional who is familiar with the vehicle to determine any discrepancies with previous repairs. This vehicle has zeroed out in value because the cost of repairing it will exceed its market value, known as mark to market in financial theory.
At about 1:45 you said what the problem is, "...his brand new driveway." NEVER get a new driveway so you never developed oil leaks. Every time someone came to my shop, they always claimed to have an oil leaking on "my new driveway." I had no idea new driveways were so popular.😂
This guy knows his stuff that's for sure. Great job doing what you're doing here. Especially with these new vehicles today you have to be careful on who you deal with for repairs. You're the "Old School" type that's taught the right way on repairs and you care on what you do which says a lot here. Keep up the good work here and great videos too.
Brian, not nitpicking if you know what you are talking about. You take pride in the product, and an OCD technician is what you want. Good to see you passing along the professionalism to your son. Thank you for the post. You illustrated perfectly why I do 90% of my own maintenance.
This is why I drove 6 hours to your shop to have work done on my 2014 F150…TRUST that it would be done correctly. I’ll be a repeat customer without question.
ITS COMMON sense to me ! do it right the first time , Take pride in what you do & no matter what field you are in . FORDTECHMAKOLOCO , THANK YOU FOR THESE GREAT VIDEOS & YOUR passion as a mechanic ,I wish i lived closer to you ,as another had said
You call it nitpicking; I call it attention to detail. That is why I watch this channel. I still haven't forgotten that video about FAKE OEM parts. Great video!
You are a badass mechanic..I don't trust anybody else out there if I get an issue with a Ford. Your videos are clear, concise, professional and reliable. Keep up the great work man..thank you
Thank you for making this video. It's! amazing what shops out there are willing to try and get away with. Their business license should be pulled until they make this right with the customer.
@@andyjames1494 Well, 44 yrs in the auto repair industry. I'm not a licensed mechanic, did installer work, advisor, then service manager, and I could write a book on all the BS people try to pull to get something for nothing, or, throw blame on others, especially at dealerships.
I bought a 2016 F150 with the 5.0 as I refused to buy a turbo engine so as to avoid the problems that so often arise with them. Feel bad for this customer as the $hit is going to be bad. I bet the installing shop will do nothing for him either. Good video and glad you made it to educate owners.
The customer should have you tear it all back down, start from scratch (taking pictures) and build it back to factory specifications, deliver a copy of the bill to the hack shop that did these repairs. If they don't pay it. Litigation time. Brian I subscribed to your channel because of how clean and precise your work is! Thank you for all you do for the trade.
i was raised that there is two ways to do things, the right way or again! Your not nitpicking one bit! People dont take pride in what they do. Keep videos like this coming!
This video could not have come at a better time. I literally just ordered that BD Diesel kit yesterday and plan to do the job myself. I hope I can do a much better job than that previous mechanic did as you showed. Thanks for the great videos!
Also, thanks to BD Diesel for the quality products they build and sell from their location here in Canada. I've been to their location many times in the past, mainly to use their 'dyno machine to check rear wheel horsepower', as well as their expertise, where they will give expert advice on specific issues on repairs one is doing! A great bunch of experts at BD Diesel, from the parts department on up to where they do the repairs, as well as where they actually build these parts we need for our trucks!
I live in Austin, Texas. There are very few mechanics I trust. I do most repair on my vehicles. If I need advice, I'll come to this feed and get advice. I fully understand that mechanics have to eat and pay bills just like the rest of us. But there are many out there that should not be in the field of auto repair. I feel they should be either in prison or cleaning public bathrooms. I want to thank you for your videos. It weeds out the filth and shows us decent Americans how to fix our vehicles.
Lax state laws and even poorer training do to not apprenticeship training program. Your state is the only one in the USA that doesn’t have a WCB PROGRAM for injured workers.
I have been in the business for 42 years and have seen broken manifold studs and got told by one owner who put it on himself that he thought it was just one bolt missing and the manifold will not break or come off. Ended up cracking the manifold which created a whole host of other problems for the guy. Long story short, replaced with a new manifold, extracted the broken stud, cleared out any codes that were created in the ECM. Hasn't had a problem since. When i started in mechanics when i was 18, i did a lot of stupid things, lol, per the learning curve of course lol, ignored installation procedures, etc,. But have learned and am still learning more and more about doing a good clean job on these newer vehicles, hell i even torque wheel stud nuts to proper specs ( about 95 ft lbs normal) lol, being honest with the customer, and above all listen to what the customer has to say to make an informed decision as to how to proceed with repairs.
Brian is absolutely right, do the job right the 1st time. I took my vehicle to Brian last year with no concern about quality work. If everyone was as meticulous as Brian, mechanics wouldn't have a bad name. Good job Brian!
This is why I do my work myself. Aging and becoming disabled is hindering my ability anymore and I have the 5.4 with an exhaust leak now. Sure wish you were close I Appreciate your knowledge and you are definitely not nit picking. You give your costumers what they pay for. 👍
You weren't kidding when you said this was a "nightmare". 😲 I experienced a few problems like this when I had the dealer work on my truck. These were Ford warranty repairs. In one case, they used a zip tie instead of the proper metal clamp on the drive shaft slip yoke boot. Another repair involved the fuel fill tubing, where they didn't fasten the band clamp down. I called them on both of these shoddy repairs. I was called in by dealer management to discuss these QA/QQ problems; they were not happy about these recurring issues. They fixed everything properly and gave me some freebies on parts to make it right. I suggested having a QA/QC mechanic inspect all repairs conducted by their shop before returning the vehicle to the customer. They agreed to do this. Later on, I actually met their QA/QC guy when they were checking another problem on the truck. I never had a problem with repairs after that. 💪👊
The only nit picking in my opinion is the use of vacuum filling cooling system tool being the best practice. It definitely helps -- can speed the process but it is not and probably never will beat purging air with the old school coolant funnel and sometimes lifting front end to get coolant fill to highest point -- to get air out. I am extremely picky on making sure cylinder heads get full of coolant. Vacuum fill has yet proven to be the "best practice" in my opinion. Keep up the good work.
It’s not unmetered. It’s just that the intake temperature was not accurately placed because it wasn’t installed. There is not a metering device in the fresh air intake portion of the engine. The intake temperature sensor is not a metering device.
Brother thanks to you my 09 f150 5.4 is still running like a top. Full synthetic and regular 5000 mile oil changes. I bought it with 100, 000 miles. also brake flush, cooling system maintenance, etc. just maintenance seems to be the key with the dreaded 3 valve.
As a retired Caterpillar mechanic, I’ve never seen anything even approaching this kind of horrifying work. There is no way I’d let them touch it again ie they need to foot the bill for a reputable shop such as yours to to repair it properly. Not even in high school beginning auto shop in the early sixties have I seen such slipshod work! Incredible!!
Just this week I had my Bronco into the dealer for a warranty fix. When I picked it up, the hood was unlatched. If they don’t get the little stuff right, they don’t get the big stuff right either.
This issue is not unique to automotive work. I had a roof replaced and there are missing and improperly driven nails all over the place. Components in contract not installed. ...
I used to work for a shop that did things like this. They used a lot of RTV where should’ve either replaced a seal or gasket. Half the time, they’d fix the original concern but patch up whatever else for “next time”. I quit working there because like you, I take pride in my work and do it right the first time. I work for me now and I’ve had to clean up messes like this. I hardly ever see my customers again because most everything gets taken care of and their vehicle runs solid and is dependable. So don’t feel like you’re nitpicking, you’re one of the best and training future generation to do better 👍🏻
no nit picking at all... just hope the shop will own their faulty ways . I just got back a set of tires and rims (oem painted ) gouged around the rim we'ii see if they're honourable enough to own it ... got my doubts. Getting harder and harder to find people who do things the right way and stand behind their work . Keep on doing it your way ,thanks for the videos
Great video and thanks for sharing your professional expertise and work ethic . This is exactly why many of us DIYERS will attempt to repair our own vehicles. So many customers cannot afford $ to be ripped off.
@@warrenlewis3977 depends on the mechanic. If the mechanic shop is clean ,Professional ,latest diagnostic equipment and QUALITY PARTS . 30 to 40 percent of what the dealers charges.
Pull the cab, Pull the cab , Pull the cab....lol You do great work. It's rare in today's world to find someone like you that does quality work and addresses all the issues..
That BDdiesel kit is awesome… if installed properly. It DOES come with everything needed. Unfortunately some shops do crap work if you bring them parts to install.
Great video first time viewer . I do a lot of side work on cars to help people out struggling to repair their car . I’m not a professional mechanic like you but I only stick to things I have knowledge of and 100 percent confidence it will be done right . I also ocd , torque everything factory specs , refuse to put on cheap parts and also only complete repairs to factory specs. Even as a non professional mechanic it is disgusting seeing these cars come in being repaired by dealerships and others claiming to be professionals. I know repairs are not cheap but to do such poor repairs and take advantage of customers is awful . Great job thank you for being one of the honest ones
17:20 got me to remember an old friend (RIP) who burned his arm on something while he was working on his car. The arm got a big red mark but after some time he saw the text FoMoCo mirrored on the burning mark.
I'm agreeing with other comment saying stop it with the nit-picking. You're paying attention to detail and that's exactly the kind of mechanic that I hire to work on my cars. It's all about having things done right.
nice to see an honest mechanic pointing out others crap work! not picky at all.. facts of sloppy work are evident to those who take pride in doing it right. well done sir.
This customer is lucky there wasn’t a turbo fire with those oil leaks. Seen it before. Shops and dealers suffer with quality Techs especially these days as vehicles get more complicated and training/certifications dwindle away. Sadly the quality Techs are over worked and under paid and forcing many to move on. But either way no excuse to perform this type of work, period. Restitution is surely deserved with this. Brian will do it right and save that Ford! Thanks for sharing Brian and reminding us DIYers to keep wrenching.
You’re not nitpicking Brian. It’s called doing things right and taking pride in your work. Glad you’re teaching your son these values as well as the repair knowledge.
I agree 1000%
Cant hire anyone who has price these days. Most new tech are losers
Absolutely Steve Turner pride in your work!
Yesir, that is what you call guaranteeing your work,and embracing your name. My type of shop that i would spend my hard work money well spend.👍😎😎😎😎
@Gormen Freeman I might attempt a thread repair or modification before calling a turbo but I haven't had one of those in my hands to see what there is to work with.
As a prior aircraft mechanic, I was always taught that if you're missing the "small things", what else are you missing? You're not nitpicking...it shows a lack of attention to detail and a lot of complacency. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and tips, much appreciated.
I personally performed this job on my own vehicle for this specific reason. I took my time, dedicating four days to the task, meticulously thread chasing and torquing all bolts and studs to the required specifications. If only Brian, who takes immense pride in his work and treats customers' vehicles with utmost care, were closer to my location in NC. I would have gladly paid for his expertise instead of doing it myself. Brian's attention to even the smallest details sets him apart. He treats customers' vehicles as if they were his own, leaving no room for mistakes.
I think that’s part of the issue you appreciate Brian and his expertise because you know him and his reputation. A lot of these guys who are unknown underbid their work to customers and out of panic and frustration rush the job so that they don’t lose their butts on the labor charge. It’s not an excuse for bad work but considering how much volume a lot of shops receive and how cheap and unappreciative a lot of customers are I can see how it happens. I have my own private shop and see this stuff all the time from larger high volume shops all of the time.
@@xXFirstHandGamerMatt
This job is labor intensive
@@xXFirstHandGamerMatt
And many of us are not "auto mechanics".
It might take me four weeks to frame a house where a Carpenter may be able to frame it in four days.
@@xXFirstHandGamerMatt I work a full time job 10 hours a day. 2-3 hours each day was truck work
Hope the job went well for ya!
Why can't all Mechanics be like FTM; honest, thorough, no cutting corners, performs the quality of work as if its his own vehicle.
FTM you are a good man and excellent mechanic !
Keep up the great videos !
Unfortunately I've seen crap work like that far too often during my over forty year career as a mechanic and that makes all of us look bad. It happens often enough that I can see why people don't trust mechanics in general. I've worked alone in my shop for many years and my customers know how meticulous I am which keeps them coming back. You are obviously the same way, which is refreshing to know I'm not alone. You do great work and I love your videos. Thank you for all the great information.
I don't understand why people do this. I mean I'm not a mechanic, I'm a contractor, but I've done enough mechanic work on my work trucks to know that it's so much more satisfying when parts and everything goes back together looking like it rolled out of the factory. I don't think I could sleep at night knowing my work looked like this...
I've had the good fortune of gaining knowledge from a couple of really good meticulous mechanics in 30 years of tinkering.. I've seen a lot of what not to do mechanics as well.. but I've never seen the I don't care one that's hazardous to our health!
I'm with you on doing a job properly. And I also don't understand why people don't give a damn how well they do something, as long as they get it done. I guess that explains the mentality of Dale Earnhardt fans; not caring how he won the race....just that he won the race. This was more important to them.
I had this ingrained in me from my perfectionist father: which is: "Do the job properly, the best you can or don't do it at all." There's no excuse for errors like this. God is watching and He knows who is doing what.
You too, huh? I have worked alone for the last 20 years for that very reason. It's called quality controll.
@@terryharvey8627 speak on it. Especially now there are some young kids who want to get into the industry but is really hard to find people that want to real foundational knowledge vs how to get hours and. jobs.
Exactly the reason why I started working on my own cars eons ago. Deep respect for dedicated mechanics like you. Button 'er up good and take pride in your work! Cheers!
Same here! That's exactly what I was going to say.
I started working on my car because I didn’t have money to pay a shop labor of $100/hr or more. Now I do it because I don’t trust most mechanics, I do have a couple buddies I will get to do stuff I can’t now though. Transmission stuff is pretty much where I draw the line beyond clutch and flywheel stuff.
When I was young man modding Mustangs, me and my friends wouldn't dream of paying of a mechanic to do something like this (even if we did have the money :-)). Where's the fun/pride/respect in that? When someone had a particularly big job going on, we all pitched in whatever we had - time, garage, tools, knowledge, even money.
And speaking of knowledge, the internet was already an invaluable resource even tho you couldn't watch a YT video because it didn't exist yet! What is these "professional" mechanic's excuse?
It's not nitpicking it's doing your job right and giving the customer what he pays for. Kudos for you doing your job right and taking pride in it
I just wanted to say thank you for all of your videos. I'm a single parent and own 4 expeditions of varying years but all with the 5.4l engine.
2 of them now have well over 300,000 miles and still running like new.
Your tips and tricks have helped me repair and maintain these vehicles saving me thousands in repair bills and/or new truck payments full coverage insurance etc.
Simply put your videos have literally improved our quality of life.
If you're reading this and own a Ford stick with this man's videos and always use motorcraft parts!
Hands down some of the most informative and no BS maintenance videos on RUclips. Keep up the great work Brian. Greetings from DownUnder.
I understand that mechanics are under great pressure to get jobs in and out as quickly as possible. Time is money. It takes time to do the job right, and sometimes you're hard press to take that time. One of the many one liners my mentor shared with me 30 years ago is the fact that if you ever feel you don't have time to do the repair right, why would you feel that you have time to do it twice? That one (as well as many others) has stuck with me throughout my entire career. Brian. You are the man buddy!
Wow, this is an example why I do whatever I can at home... I've not seen a hack job like this one in a long time... I wish you would call out these shops to warn people, but understand the possible liability by doing it... You are right about it these places give you all a bad reputation...
It is not libel or slander if it is true
@@MrGamerholic Does it matter when you are slapped with a civil suit and have to pay to prove you're telling the truth... Either pay an attorney, or take time off yourself to appear in court... You lose one way or another... For what to say "see I was right..."
@@TheRealSlowhand which is why you would file a counter suit for attorney fees and time wasted
@@MrGamerholic So lets go down that path... You go to court and win the civil case... It isn't just that simple but lets assume you take a day off to go to court to clear yourself from false allegations and win... How much did you lose in work for this... Then you turn around and file a counter suit assuming you can because some states don't allow you to do that... But lets say you can... Filing isn't free, process serving isn't free... Now more lost income on top of business because you have court... So lets say you win a judgement and they refuse to pay you... Now what you have to spend even more money and lost work to get your judgement... All of this because you outed a competitors crappy work... At the end of the day if you still think it's worth it then you haven't owned your own business...
This is more common than you think.
Stuff like this is the exact reason I do almost everything on my vehicles.
Thanks for the videos! I love watching your stuff.
You’re not nitpicking at all. I’ve found that when you get on a piece of equipment and notice seemingly small things like caps which aren’t fastened and coolant out of acceptable range it’s a sign that other things are being missed as well.
I sure hope the shop made it right for this guy.
Im a diesel mechanic, with 20 years experience working in the heavy equipment industry. I run into this kind of issue all the time, people take no pride in their work anymore. Sad but true.
I'll tell you one thing, you weren't nit-picking. You have pride in your work unlike other people in this world. That's why you have the following you have and the reputation you have. Don't ever stop nit-picking, these vehicles require that kind of attention to detail I feel; they get more complex and complex and I've always appreciated your ability to navigate us common-folk through the issues these modern-day vehicles can have.
Wow! That must be absolutely infuriating for that customer. I'd be suing that shop.
Everybody 'SUE' happy. Get the all the moneys back so you can start again somewhere that does proper work.
@@gmans7859 This case JUSTIFIES litigation!
That'a What Small Claims Courts are For... You dont hire a $10,000 Dollar Lawyer for a $700 Dollar Part,,, Lol...
@@gmans7859 I don’t think that POS shop would just easily write over a check for their $3,000 in damages
If you think mechanics rip people off, wait until you talk to a lawyer.
It's one of the reasons I like to do my own work. Now that I'm retired, I do almost 100% of it. Back when I was working, if I was in over my head time-wise, I would give the job to a local shop where I've done business for years. Even then I might still find things, like screws not replaced, a bolt broken, covers not replaced properly. And, the industry is set up to perpetuate this! Nobody allowed in the shop area "for insurance reasons," so there''s no way to check the work. You are expected to pay for the job, sight unseen, and then drive away. This is unheard of in other trades. Imagine having a plumber install a new sink, but you don't get to see it until after you've paid AND the plumber has driven away??? No?, Well that''s how the auto repair business operates, and unscrupulous mechanics. like the clown that worked on this truck, take full advantage of it!
Here''s another thing. When you're buying a vehicle, whether new or used, ask them to put it on a lift. They're going to balk, come up with excuses, we can't do that, nobody has ever asked that before, etc. I just tell them, Hey, you're selling six-sided vehicles and I need to see side number six before I buy. I don't bust their chops - asking for this on every vehicle is unreasonable. But if everything else I can see on sides 1 through 5 looks good, and I am serious about it, if they won't show me side #6, I walk
I would just buy a beater while my truck was down. Every time I let someone touch my trucks or cars I'm made out to be the fool.
@seananderson127 and they simply assume you can put your daily driver in line with 7 others and wait two to six weeks for them to call with the damages.
I'm canceling an appointment today because in 2 weeks I can either fix it or totally destroy it.
All very good points. Right now, my early DI engine probably needs the intake valves walnut blasted. I'd love to just pay somebody, and it'd be trivial to let me see the all-important before/after while the intake manifold is off, but unless I actually take it to @FordTechMakuloco or a handful of others, that just 'aint gonna happen. So, I'll probably end up doing it myself, buying $$ tools I'll only use once (still worth it to me if I can loan them out or use them just once more), but at least I'll know it's done right.
Your output is at an AME level. In fact, you exceed many of the cleanliness practices common in the aviation industry. I suspect that's why you have customers driving in from Texas! Thanks for this video - I'd love to know how it all turns out for the customer. I'd welcome a follow-up some time down the road.
In my opinion you are the best Ford/Mercury/Lincoln mechanic in the country. Your OCD for quality and factory procedures is what customers WANT and DESIRE in a repair. I've watched tons of your videos and you always do a great job. Sadly, so many mechanics just don't care and just want money. I would be scared to take my vehicle to anyone that doesn't have a proven track record.
In my province shop rates are $ 170 per hr, we expect trained techs to work on vehicles not grease moneys
Brian at FordTechMakuloco, David at CarWizard, EricO at SMA, Scott at Vehcor, and Ray at RainmanRay all seem to strive to do what's best for the customer while running a good business and creating great content. It's got to be a constant balancing act. And each of these guys have posted videos showing having to deal with and correct other shop's stupidity - or crookedness. Hat's off to these fine content creators who help educate (and entertain) us regularly. "There's your dinner!"
Agree and would add The Car Care Nut is good for those with Toyota.
@@onenikkione Oh that was a total oversight on my part. Ahmet at The Car Care Nut is fantastic! SO customer focused, striving to to "the right thing" - even if that means giving "tough love" and informing the customer their vehicle is too far gone to repair.
Also, Ivan at Pine Hollow Auto Diagnostics.
@@lvsqcsl Doh! You caught another one I missed. 100% correct! The brilliant Russian diagnostican. More superb content. We are so lucky to be entertained by all these mechanics!
@@bartfox9187 😂
if i find one thing on my veickle like anything about any of this, thats why im thankfull for FTM to show me every step to do every step myself, correctle, and for reasons! this guys is awesome!
Wow, that customer got screwed... That shop has no business working on vehicles.
Excellent honest techs should be celebrated! I would be tipping this guy left & right for his EXCELLENT service! My Ford trucks are all super solid. All we buy! I do great basic maintenance..always. Never know maybe in future i will need call Brian. Thankyou sir for what ya do! 💯 -MI
Love your attention to detail and professionalism.
He does repairs the way they should be done, the way anyone who calls themselves a mechanic, should.
THIS is why I do my own work. Takes me longer and sometimes I have to 'get educated' ala- RUclips University; but I KNOW I got it or WILL get it right.. even when I gotta go back and redo something. I'm so thankful for channels like this. Good luck everybody and Brian, thanks again for making this vid and all your vids.
I would really like to see a video of you fixing all this! This is for sure my favorite RUclips channel!
This video is exactly why I brought you my truck all the way from Washington for the timing and exhaust manifold job.
It's a real shame that there aren't more ethical mechanics out there like you Brian. I hope this customer gets a fair settlement from the previous shop's "work".
same as with every other profession: 80% retrads that don't care and have no pride in their work and aten't going to improve their skills in their lifetime and around twenty that do and are way less retraded... 😽
The experienced and thorough mechanics are driven out and replaced with younger idiots who know nothing about diagnosing and repairing vehicles and have no care about resolving customer concerns and have no respect for the customers' property. It's all about generating more repair orders and getting them closed even if the vehicle comes right back on the flatbed missing a wheel or needing an engine. I see this over and over and over and I flat out refuse to work on any repair order that is a result of express scum destroying something on a customer's vehicle.
It is refreshing to see this video. I have had my own horror story, but involves many mechanics making erroneous diagnostic and repairs over 10 years. I finally found a competent mechanic who listened and fixed the problem. 2003 f150 vacuum loss issue.
Ah a bit of hometown pride here...BD DIesel's head offices and main plant is literally 15 minutes away from where I'm sitting right now here in Abbotsford BC Canada. That said this install leaves a lot to be desired! And BD does make some really nice stuff and it's nice that it's a Canadian company, a lil bit of north of the border goodness.
I look forward to see what Brians son can do to keep his dad's shop and quailty work going into the future..you guys are great..
I’m sure he will be just like his Dad. He’s Teaching him Right to have Pride in your Work, and do the Job right the First Time.
How long before the fire started?
How long drawing in dirty air through the missing sensor port before engine or turbo failure?
Per usual Brian FANTASTIC video!
I loved how you stressed the word "EVER" while looking over at your son.
Great mechanic, great dad.
Your absolutely right Brian. Very hard to find a trusted and expert mechanic nowadays.
I used to work beside that guy at the dealership. He made 70 grand a year and the management loved him.
Should have made over 100 grand.!
He always got the jobs out quick when they needed him to.
Were you guys at Fox Valley?
Hey man i needed the money and you can't see it from my house !
It's so nice to see some mechanics are honest and professional and take pride in their work.
Thank you for your helpful videos! I went to the Ford dealer for a misfire on a 2001 f150 5.4l and they said they changed all the spark plugs. Well I changed the plugs about a year before but said ok . Long story short every time it rained I would get a misfire on the number 4 cylinder so I pulled the coil pack and found that they broke that plug off and used epoxy and glued the plug and coil pack boot in the hole. The reason I know they broke it off is that the broken plug was a motorcraft and the rest of the plugs were autolite. The dealership went bankrupt because of dealings like this with multiple lawsuits in court.
And this is why I do all my own work even though I am not a mechanic per se. But like you I am OCD about doing it right the first time. My trust in mechanics was over at ten years of age. Bicycle mechanic was supposed to do the 30 day break-in tune up. Got my bike back and the gooseneck was loose in the stem. Almost got clobbered by a lady backing out of her drive when I tried to swerve only to have the bars turn and the bike continue on straight ahead. Thought my dad was gonna kill the shop owner.
That started my shade tree wrench wrestling.
I worked as a mechanic in a local bicycle shop and the owner was adamant that every repair was to be road tested! It made us very aware that if you messed up the repair, you were going to be eating pavement.
Oh man that is a botched job. By the looks of it, If they do that poorly on something like this, I'd definitely wouldn't have them change my oil. Who knows if they would even put in the right weight oil or enough oil. Great video Brian, I admire your attention to detail and doing things right the first time.
I hear that,I took my 03 camry to midas for an oil change and the dumbass "tech" broke my upper radiator hose support off while trying to take the oil filter off.760$ to replace.the moron owner admitted it and tried to blame it on the age of the car( nothing was wrong when I brought it in) this happened in Visalia CA.Don't go there.
Botched? Sheer negligence. I'd pursue legal action given this documentation.
@@glorgau that's why they have to have shop insurance. usually taking it up the chain(Midas, TBC, etc.) on their corporate Twatter™ account helps way faster. 😏
Thanks for being a genuine mechanic that takes pride in your craft and for passing it on. It's mechanics like you that can help ppl and not just screw them over. never say your nitpicking when your as good as you are... It's a great feeling when one has a good mechanic and can be on the road and trust the ride they have, especially when the person that works on it did a great job and didn't screw them over in one way or another we have children and other loved ones that we take wherever they need to go and it's a shame that we have crappy mechanics doing crappy work apologies i had better words for those mechanics lol
I’m also somewhat OCD and stopped trusting mechanics at shops and dealers probably 25 years ago. I was getting sick to my stomach watching this Brian. Terrible is all I can say. This mechanic/shop needs to be exposed and folks need to be warned to stay away!!!
I am exactly 9 minutes and 38 seconds into this video.I have been doing this for over 35 years 310s and t. You are definitely not nitpicking. When you are done a job it should always look like you were never there, every bracket ,bolt ,clip etc. has a purpose. I have seen so many vehicles come in with hoses rubbing where they shouldn’t and rupturing, or wires chafing etc, all because some backyard guy thought he was an engineer and omitted something that he thought didn’t matter because he was too lazy to put it back. I can’t wait to see what happens when we look underneath when you raise the lift lol. You are definitely my go to for 3v and eco boost. You have saved me so much time and aggravation so many times. Keep up the great work and I thank you .Stay safe and take care
Times are changing Brian
Isn’t like when I turned a wrench at the dealer. Took pride in my work because I did not want to get back flagged for the work I did. Need more like you and I’m glad your teaching him the right way.
This same crap was going on 50 years ago. My uncle ran a Great Bear in NYC. He and my dad complained about other folks work back then, too.
I think it comes down to 2 things: a lack of integrity and carelessness. I can’t knowingly send a car out the door with a problem I created or didn’t fix properly when I’m being paid to fix a problem. I want to return a safe car that’s running properly to the customer. I try my best to leave no trace and put all the push pins and fasteners back where they are supposed to be. Carelessness is a trap anyone can fall into here and there and accidents happen but if that’s your regular M.O. then you’re in the wrong industry.
Great video and very informative! I don't think he's nitpicking either, it's hard to find great technicians like this man these days, he's just pointing out things that should have been fixed or attended to without a second thought. What I appreciate most from these videos is that they are always reminding me of what a genius I am for not owning any Fords, they really are garbage. The engineering and poor designs makes me sick!
What an absolute shame. Even harder now to undo the botched up mess from the first shop. I can't even imagine the total expense getting this all straightened out. Good luck to the customer getting even any restitution back from the first shop. Thanks for sharing, Brian....
don't know how it works in the US in that case but here, in France, my insurer pays to have the job done after everything has been documented and then they haggle with the shop insurance company 'til both are satisfied with the outcome. i don't pay a single euro and get a fixed car way sooner. 🙄
@@kittytrail I am not exactly sure what insurance covers maintenance ? Or do you have an insurance against shoddy work ??
@@dmitripogosian5084 kinda, it depends on what kind of coverage you've paid for but if your car is not repaired/modified as it should be by a professionnel, they'll have the job redone somewhere else then get the cost paid back by the first shop insurer as a shop has to be insured to be able to do business here. if you have the minimum legal level of insurance for a road worthy vehicles it's your problem though and you'll have to go to court suing the shop and/or its insurance company if the shop is insolvent. hope this clarifies it. 😉
@@kittytrail Interesting, I never heard about that kind of insurance in Canada (actually our system is rather province dependent, so that's a caveat) Even comprehensive insurance means that you are covered for road accidents, and maybe if a tree fell on you, but not if your motor needs to be repaired. Shop insurances that's their business, but if you deal with maintenance I do not believe that my insurance can be involved. I need to check British Columbia, their car insurance is run by government, and there are no options, everybody is covered the same way.
@@dmitripogosian5084 it's not about maintenance, it's about malpractice: a shop does shoddy work on your car, it has a professionnal insurance, your insurer has your car towed, damages are checked by an independent expert whose work is legally admissible and then pays the repairs, you get your car back running fine and they settle every thing with the shop insurance so you don't have to deal with them. a neighbour even had his car insurance cover for a botched wrap job last year. 😉
edit: sorry, it is also about maintenance if a shop does the work as they will settle everything with the shop insurance but not if you do it yourself. a good example is if a shop doing tyres rotation overtorques (over 400Nm instead of 90Nm discovered when trying to remove a wheel after a flat in my case, which can lead to failure and a crash) your bolts or lugnuts they'll step in and work on your behalf before the other party insurer has paid.
You ARE NOT nitpicking. People pay PROFESSIONALS to be professionals and NOT miss things like this and take reassembly shortcuts. They pay what is asked of them to GET GOOD SERVICE. What frosts my cherries is paying good money to get shortcuts and inattention to detail. I would not be pleased to find these issues and I WOULD find them. You did everything right! You are trustworthy.
Thanks for reminding me why I do all my auto maintenance myself!
Good for you and your OCD. It shows why you are a GREAT technician! Like you said, it just gets worse and worse as you go along! I can't believe someone would do such a bad job like that and give it back to a customer!
Great video. There is no 'nitpicking' here. This a complete butcher job.
Wonder how many other people's vehicles have been butchered by this shop. Yikes!
Given the level of incompetence or outright fraud demonstrated on this job, most likely every vehicle they ever touched!
That’s not nitpicking Brien. Your being a good honest tech that cares and has compassion for what you do. Wish there were more folks like you.
Great examples of why I do my own work (as much as possible). Thanks!
So thankful I have the knowledge & ability to do my own work. Brian, you're a great mechanic! Really enjoy watching your channel.
Excellent presentation on why a vehicle needs to be inspected by an unbiased professional who is familiar with the vehicle to determine any discrepancies with previous repairs. This vehicle has zeroed out in value because the cost of repairing it will exceed its market value, known as mark to market in financial theory.
At about 1:45 you said what the problem is, "...his brand new driveway." NEVER get a new driveway so you never developed oil leaks. Every time someone came to my shop, they always claimed to have an oil leaking on "my new driveway." I had no idea new driveways were so popular.😂
This guy knows his stuff that's for sure. Great job doing what you're doing here. Especially with these new vehicles today you have to be careful on who you deal with for repairs. You're the "Old School" type that's taught the right way on repairs and you care on what you do which says a lot here. Keep up the good work here and great videos too.
Such a smart man. You do amazing work. Good job 👍
Brian, not nitpicking if you know what you are talking about. You take pride in the product, and an OCD technician is what you want. Good to see you passing along the professionalism to your son. Thank you for the post. You illustrated perfectly why I do 90% of my own maintenance.
This is why I drove 6 hours to your shop to have work done on my 2014 F150…TRUST that it would be done correctly. I’ll be a repeat customer without question.
ITS COMMON sense to me ! do it right the first time , Take pride in what you do & no matter what field you are in . FORDTECHMAKOLOCO , THANK YOU FOR THESE GREAT VIDEOS & YOUR passion as a mechanic ,I wish i lived closer to you ,as another had said
You call it nitpicking; I call it attention to detail. That is why I watch this channel. I still haven't forgotten that video about FAKE OEM parts. Great video!
I’m a DYI guy and would not do so a crappie job like they did.
You are a badass mechanic..I don't trust anybody else out there if I get an issue with a Ford. Your videos are clear, concise, professional and reliable. Keep up the great work man..thank you
Thank you for making this video. It's! amazing what shops out there are willing to try and get away with. Their business license should be pulled until they make this right with the customer.
Where is the proof it was another shop? Probably a buddy on a weekend over several bottles of beer. Happens more than you'd think.
@@andyjames1494 Well, 44 yrs in the auto repair industry. I'm not a licensed mechanic, did installer work, advisor, then service manager, and I could write a book on all the BS people try to pull to get something for nothing, or, throw blame on others, especially at dealerships.
I bought a 2016 F150 with the 5.0 as I refused to buy a turbo engine so as to avoid the problems that so often arise with them. Feel bad for this customer as the $hit is going to be bad. I bet the installing shop will do nothing for him either. Good video and glad you made it to educate owners.
The customer should have you tear it all back down, start from scratch (taking pictures) and build it back to factory specifications, deliver a copy of the bill to the hack shop that did these repairs. If they don't pay it. Litigation time. Brian I subscribed to your channel because of how clean and precise your work is! Thank you for all you do for the trade.
i was raised that there is two ways to do things, the right way or again! Your not nitpicking one bit! People dont take pride in what they do. Keep videos like this coming!
Oil leaks are so annoying, especially if caused by a hack.
This video could not have come at a better time. I literally just ordered that BD Diesel kit yesterday and plan to do the job myself. I hope I can do a much better job than that previous mechanic did as you showed. Thanks for the great videos!
Also, thanks to BD Diesel for the quality products they build and sell from their location here in Canada. I've been to their location many times in the past, mainly to use their 'dyno machine to check rear wheel horsepower', as well as their expertise, where they will give expert advice on specific issues on repairs one is doing! A great bunch of experts at BD Diesel, from the parts department on up to where they do the repairs, as well as where they actually build these parts we need for our trucks!
I live in Austin, Texas. There are very few mechanics I trust. I do most repair on my vehicles. If I need advice, I'll come to this feed and get advice. I fully understand that mechanics have to eat and pay bills just like the rest of us. But there are many out there that should not be in the field of auto repair. I feel they should be either in prison or cleaning public bathrooms. I want to thank you for your videos. It weeds out the filth and shows us decent Americans how to fix our vehicles.
please, not cleaning public bathrooms if they keep the same work ethic there... 💩
Lax state laws and even poorer training do to not apprenticeship training program. Your state is the only one in the USA that doesn’t have a WCB PROGRAM for injured workers.
I have been in the business for 42 years and have seen broken manifold studs and got told by one owner who put it on himself that he thought it was just one bolt missing and the manifold will not break or come off. Ended up cracking the manifold which created a whole host of other problems for the guy. Long story short, replaced with a new manifold, extracted the broken stud, cleared out any codes that were created in the ECM. Hasn't had a problem since. When i started in mechanics when i was 18, i did a lot of stupid things, lol, per the learning curve of course lol, ignored installation procedures, etc,. But have learned and am still learning more and more about doing a good clean job on these newer vehicles, hell i even torque wheel stud nuts to proper specs ( about 95 ft lbs normal) lol, being honest with the customer, and above all listen to what the customer has to say to make an informed decision as to how to proceed with repairs.
Hopefully the customer has a good attorney so he can slap a lawsuit on that shop
Brian is absolutely right, do the job right the 1st time. I took my vehicle to Brian last year with no concern about quality work. If everyone was as meticulous as Brian, mechanics wouldn't have a bad name. Good job Brian!
Definitely a hack job. No pride in your work. Good video.
This is why I do my work myself. Aging and becoming disabled is hindering my ability anymore and I have the 5.4 with an exhaust leak now. Sure wish you were close
I Appreciate your knowledge and you are definitely not nit picking. You give your costumers what they pay for. 👍
Perfect example of "I've got a buddy who can do it cheaper"
Not nit picking, If it's worth doing.... Do it right. Good for you for wanting to see that it's done right! You have pride in your work.
Omg I have seen a high school auto class do better work . Keep up the great work
You weren't kidding when you said this was a "nightmare". 😲 I experienced a few problems like this when I had the dealer work on my truck. These were Ford warranty repairs. In one case, they used a zip tie instead of the proper metal clamp on the drive shaft slip yoke boot. Another repair involved the fuel fill tubing, where they didn't fasten the band clamp down. I called them on both of these shoddy repairs. I was called in by dealer management to discuss these QA/QQ problems; they were not happy about these recurring issues. They fixed everything properly and gave me some freebies on parts to make it right. I suggested having a QA/QC mechanic inspect all repairs conducted by their shop before returning the vehicle to the customer. They agreed to do this. Later on, I actually met their QA/QC guy when they were checking another problem on the truck. I never had a problem with repairs after that. 💪👊
Awesome work as always! I wanna know if your customer had an recourse with the botched job shop? Did they get money back??
The only nit picking in my opinion is the use of vacuum filling cooling system tool being the best practice. It definitely helps -- can speed the process but it is not and probably never will beat purging air with the old school coolant funnel and sometimes lifting front end to get coolant fill to highest point -- to get air out. I am extremely picky on making sure cylinder heads get full of coolant. Vacuum fill has yet proven to be the "best practice" in my opinion. Keep up the good work.
8:00 not only unmetered but unfiltered. Dangit, people need to double check their work.
It’s not unmetered. It’s just that the intake temperature was not accurately placed because it wasn’t installed. There is not a metering device in the fresh air intake portion of the engine. The intake temperature sensor is not a metering device.
Brother thanks to you my 09 f150 5.4 is still running like a top. Full synthetic and regular 5000 mile oil changes. I bought it with 100, 000 miles. also brake flush, cooling system maintenance, etc. just maintenance seems to be the key with the dreaded 3 valve.
Great job you are right to many butcher mechanics out there.
It’s why I’m in auto tech school. I got ripped off 2 times, and nope! I’m now a DIY er.
Thanks for your video. Found you from Uncle Tony’s Garage.
As a retired Caterpillar mechanic, I’ve never seen anything even approaching this kind of horrifying work. There is no way I’d let them touch it again ie they need to foot the bill for a reputable shop such as yours to to repair it properly. Not even in high school beginning auto shop in the early sixties have I seen such slipshod work! Incredible!!
Just this week I had my Bronco into the dealer for a warranty fix. When I picked it up, the hood was unlatched. If they don’t get the little stuff right, they don’t get the big stuff right either.
This issue is not unique to automotive work. I had a roof replaced and there are missing and improperly driven nails all over the place. Components in contract not installed. ...
I used to work for a shop that did things like this. They used a lot of RTV where should’ve either replaced a seal or gasket. Half the time, they’d fix the original concern but patch up whatever else for “next time”. I quit working there because like you, I take pride in my work and do it right the first time. I work for me now and I’ve had to clean up messes like this. I hardly ever see my customers again because most everything gets taken care of and their vehicle runs solid and is dependable. So don’t feel like you’re nitpicking, you’re one of the best and training future generation to do better 👍🏻
no nit picking at all... just hope the shop will own their faulty ways . I just got back a set of tires and rims (oem painted ) gouged around the rim we'ii see if they're honourable enough to own it ... got my doubts. Getting harder and harder to find people who do things the right way and stand behind their work . Keep on doing it your way ,thanks for the videos
Was this done at a dealership or a second hand shop? This company needs exposed.
'Another-shop' = 'Customer or their brother/cousin' 😦😲😦
Great video and thanks for sharing your professional expertise and work ethic . This is exactly why many of us DIYERS will attempt to repair our own vehicles. So many customers cannot afford $ to be ripped off.
If you find a good mechanic pay him his worth .
What would you consider a fair hourly wage?
@@warrenlewis3977 depends on the mechanic. If the mechanic shop is clean
,Professional ,latest diagnostic equipment and QUALITY PARTS . 30 to 40 percent of what the dealers charges.
Pull the cab, Pull the cab , Pull the cab....lol
You do great work. It's rare in today's world to find someone like you that does quality work and addresses all the issues..
That BDdiesel kit is awesome… if installed properly. It DOES come with everything needed. Unfortunately some shops do crap work if you bring them parts to install.
Great video first time viewer . I do a lot of side work on cars to help people out struggling to repair their car . I’m not a professional mechanic like you but I only stick to things I have knowledge of and 100 percent confidence it will be done right . I also ocd , torque everything factory specs , refuse to put on cheap parts and also only complete repairs to factory specs. Even as a non professional mechanic it is disgusting seeing these cars come in being repaired by dealerships and others claiming to be professionals. I know repairs are not cheap but to do such poor repairs and take advantage of customers is awful . Great job thank you for being one of the honest ones
17:20 got me to remember an old friend (RIP) who burned his arm on something while he was working on his car.
The arm got a big red mark but after some time he saw the text FoMoCo mirrored on the burning mark.
I'm agreeing with other comment saying stop it with the nit-picking. You're paying attention to detail and that's exactly the kind of mechanic that I hire to work on my cars.
It's all about having things done right.
Solid work. Excellent demonstration for those of us not as educated as yourself. THANK YOU!
Not nitpicking, basic mechanic skills and diligence totally lacking - dismissed immediately at my shop. Thanks for the video
nice to see an honest mechanic pointing out others crap work! not picky at all.. facts of sloppy work are evident to those who take pride in doing it right. well done sir.
This customer is lucky there wasn’t a turbo fire with those oil leaks. Seen it before. Shops and dealers suffer with quality Techs especially these days as vehicles get more complicated and training/certifications dwindle away. Sadly the quality Techs are over worked and under paid and forcing many to move on. But either way no excuse to perform this type of work, period. Restitution is surely deserved with this. Brian will do it right and save that Ford! Thanks for sharing Brian and reminding us DIYers to keep wrenching.