Luc
I think the point of this story is that the lube tech knew nothing about vipers. Even if he changed the oil correctly - that still leaves alot of questions in my mind about how the Viper would be treated during the course of this procedure.
Starting with opening the car door in the parking lot, its a wider door than the 99% of doors in the parking lot he's used to opening. Would he have opened it too far and dinged it on the car next to him? Letting out the clutch, having not experienced a Vipers massive torque, would he have ****** it, or rode it too long? Not knowing how low and lengthy the front can be, would he have scraped it driving too fast into the bay if the drive was not level? Having to pull up to the lift and never having driven a Viper before -would he have pulled the nose too close to the wall or bench and "touched"? Would he place the lifting arms on the hoist properly on the frame - so that the Viper was lifted correctly, hopefully not damaging anything like the frame or the side sills etc? And would he have spent 20 minutes trying to figure out lifting the hood and thus tried a few non-conventional ways before figuring it out? Would he spill oil on the engine on re-fill making a mess? - after all it is just like any other car right? Would he, because he had never had the joy of driving a Viper before, be tempted to do a couple of spins in the rear parking lot before returning it to you?
Personally, there are too many questions left up in the air.
I don't want any Tech who knows nothing about Vipers, and who has never driven one, working on my car.
Plain and simple. Even if he was considerate and everything went ockay - it's just a nervewracking experience nonetheless.
I think the point of this story is that the lube tech knew nothing about vipers. Even if he changed the oil correctly - that still leaves alot of questions in my mind about how the Viper would be treated during the course of this procedure.
Starting with opening the car door in the parking lot, its a wider door than the 99% of doors in the parking lot he's used to opening. Would he have opened it too far and dinged it on the car next to him? Letting out the clutch, having not experienced a Vipers massive torque, would he have ****** it, or rode it too long? Not knowing how low and lengthy the front can be, would he have scraped it driving too fast into the bay if the drive was not level? Having to pull up to the lift and never having driven a Viper before -would he have pulled the nose too close to the wall or bench and "touched"? Would he place the lifting arms on the hoist properly on the frame - so that the Viper was lifted correctly, hopefully not damaging anything like the frame or the side sills etc? And would he have spent 20 minutes trying to figure out lifting the hood and thus tried a few non-conventional ways before figuring it out? Would he spill oil on the engine on re-fill making a mess? - after all it is just like any other car right? Would he, because he had never had the joy of driving a Viper before, be tempted to do a couple of spins in the rear parking lot before returning it to you?
Personally, there are too many questions left up in the air.
I don't want any Tech who knows nothing about Vipers, and who has never driven one, working on my car.
Plain and simple. Even if he was considerate and everything went ockay - it's just a nervewracking experience nonetheless.