Quote:
Originally Posted by BLUEH20
I asked him a rather honest question--you did not find what is wrong with me; you did not correct anything--why should I pay you-You did not do anything.
In reality world--I just do not think this mind set will get one very far with a physican or a tradesman. - nor shoud it.
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Consider the cost of the tools, equipment, training, building & support staff, and overhead (like liability insurance)............ These costs remain the same whether a fault is repaired or not.
The bill is for expertise above the norm, and time spent.
The difference between the doctor and mechanic are clear......
1: They live in different neighborhoods with different standards of living.
2: Doctors only have to work on 2 models, with all the parts in the same places. Mechanics work on 300+ models from 100 years of production. These have parts hidden in all sorts of strange places!
3: Doctors 'usually' do their work with the engine running.
4: If a doctor makes a mistake, they bury it. A mechanic's mistake will come back forever and ever!