Thanks guys! As long as it looks close, I am good with it!
I can definitely buy the parts cheaper online and do myself and save most of that money, but that extra time is hard to find!
I have not picked up the mower yet, as I am stuck working all weekend. I will post the itemized list, probably Monday.
But can you ?
Or are you buying inferior copy parts sold only on line & particularly on evilbay.
An internet retailer can always be cheaper than a shop front due to the fixed costs of actually running the business and that is assuming they are buying quality parts & not Chineese knock offs.
I buy a lot of parts from Jacks.
They get my money, then place an order on their supplier then post the parts to me and 30 days or so latter , pay the supplier for the parts with my money that has been sitting in their bank for a month or so.
I buy parts for stock from my supplier , pay for them 30 days latter then when needed fit them to a customers mower & they pay me when I am finished.
Thus in order to have a turnover of 1 week or less I need to carry $ 150,000 in parts on my shelf.
Thus the price the customer pays for these parts reflects the fact that I could have made significantly more money on that $ 150,000.
By the time I get the inventory to the level sufficiant to be able to turn around all my existing customers mowers in 1 day the parts inventory will be near $ 250,000.
And we are talking only about the actual parts that are needed for existing customers mowers ( I buy double every time I need a part that is not in stock )
There is over 1000 different belts alone, if one was to keep one only of each you are looking at $ 50,000 min. And I need a weeks supply so par stock on some common belts is 5
About 600 diferent blades which would go to around $ 15,000. Again most common AYP blades, par stock is 5 sets.
I need to keep 16 different grades of oil, 25 different oil filers, 300+ air filters many of which I have to buy by the box full.
So my parts are usully more expensive than on line shops.
I do occasionally fit parts the customer supplies with a written & signed disclaimer that I will not be liable for damages if the parts fail in service.
When confronted by this document , most of the cheapskates shrivel away & either fit them themselves or renig and allow me to fit my parts that carry insurance with them.
Who will you sue if the blade breaks when you hit a rock , goes flying across the road and hits a passing car/ person/ animal , knocks a hole in your window/wall /car? slim chances , but always possible.
Or if the $ 5.00 Chineese chain breaks, wraps around the limb you are trimming then takes a sizable amount of your anatomy with it ?
And when you buy on line remember there is time involved in finding the correct parts & placing the order. Time is money and some one has to pay for that time.