Halfrauds labour at £80 an hour pro rata
Halfrauds labour at £80 an hour pro rata
Author
Discussion

LuS1fer

Original Poster:

42,660 posts

261 months

Monday 27th September 2010
quotequote all
My mother is 71 and unlike many, checks her lights and recently found a rear brake light out. She went to Halfrauds and bought a pack of bulbs and took up the offer of fitment for which they charged her £5. The other brake light went and I fitted it and it took about 3 minutes but let's allow 5 for the "trained fitter" as he may have needed a manual.....

It's a Ford Galaxy so you pull a panel off, flick a clip, pull out the light board, replace bulb and reverse the process. With training, you could do it in under a minute.

Shocking. That is all.

mnkiboy

4,409 posts

182 months

Monday 27th September 2010
quotequote all
It's not that easy to change the bulbs on some vehicles. On the Peugeot 206 for example you have to carefully drain out all the water which has been sitting inside the light lens, including all the mould that has built up in there.

Do you think they should charge a different amount for every vehicle, determined by how easy it is to swap the bulb. Perhaps it's just easier to charge a flat £5.

ShadownINja

78,699 posts

298 months

Monday 27th September 2010
quotequote all
Don't see the problem. If she didn't want to pay £5 then she should have just done it herself. Maybe she prefers paying for peace of mind knowing that (1) it will work properly (2) she won't risk breaking any fitments (presumably they are insured for breakages to a customer's car if they fluff it up).

TommyBuoy

1,273 posts

183 months

Monday 27th September 2010
quotequote all
They also cahrge for fitting wipers too - although I am sure that many people find the service to be very useful.

I have only ever got Halfauds to fit one bulb before and was quite happy for it -
my nearside front indicator bulb went so I got them to fit it (I had previously broken part of the clip so it is an absolute nightmare, added to the fact the light was fading I didn;t fancy cutting my fingers up).

I spent the next 25 minutes perusing their store whilst the 'techincian' battled with the job. Made me smile.

miniman

28,349 posts

278 months

Monday 27th September 2010
quotequote all
Hardly shocking, is it? They are there to service a market, one that will pay £5 to have a lightbulb fitted. Had your Mum gone to the local motor factors, the bulb would have been cheaper and had she said "can you tell me how to fit this please?" they would almost certainly have done it for her gratis.

anonymous-user

70 months

Monday 27th September 2010
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If it was £5 for a 5 minute job with their "trained fitter" then that's £60 ph, no?

I think its extortion too, but I'm sure they have to have some kind of insurance and training to do the different jobs - and most people are too lazy/scared to do things themselves, so probably consider it a bargain.

E31Shrew

5,953 posts

208 months

Monday 27th September 2010
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I would've thought £5.00 was a bargain. How much would the main dealer have charged for bulb and fitting?

Dog Star

17,012 posts

184 months

Monday 27th September 2010
quotequote all
I don't see why they shouldn't charge - what if someone wants a sidelight bulb changing on a Mk3 MR2 for example? yikes

(On a related note of mechanical numptiness - I know a chap who takes his bike to the dealer when his chain needs adjusting rolleyes)

LuS1fer

Original Poster:

42,660 posts

261 months

Monday 27th September 2010
quotequote all
mnkiboy said:
It's not that easy to change the bulbs on some vehicles. On the Peugeot 206 for example you have to carefully drain out all the water which has been sitting inside the light lens, including all the mould that has built up in there.

Do you think they should charge a different amount for every vehicle, determined by how easy it is to swap the bulb. Perhaps it's just easier to charge a flat £5.
I agree entirely but in cases like this, they should have waived the charge and done it for nothing. She'll probably buy her neons, rims and supercharger elsewhere now.... wink

edo

16,699 posts

281 months

Monday 27th September 2010
quotequote all
I wouldn't fit bulbs for less than a fiver personally.

Halfords cant have a bulb fitting price for every make and model - £5 as a flat average seems fair to me - a damn sight less than a main dealer would charge.

Larry Dickman

3,762 posts

234 months

Monday 27th September 2010
quotequote all
I don't work for nothing so why should anyone else.

cheadle hulme

2,496 posts

198 months

Monday 27th September 2010
quotequote all
Get them to change a headlight bulb on a Megane Scenic! It would work out at £5 per hour labour.

Nash_wrx

467 posts

199 months

Monday 27th September 2010
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£5 Flat rate is not bad, try replacing side light bulbs on an Alfa 156 or facelift FTO,
is a headlight out job in both accounts.

beanbag

7,346 posts

257 months

Monday 27th September 2010
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Just try walking into any BMW or Audi garage. Amazingly they charge for work there too. An astonishing €120 per hour at BMW!!!

MadRob6

3,594 posts

236 months

Monday 27th September 2010
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I used to work at Halfords and got in trouble with the boss fairly often for failing to charge customers for the fitting of things but only if I knew it was going to be a piece of piss. I was the only person to go and look at the car before attempting it and had a habit of when I went to look just fitting the bulb/stereo/whatever and then just charging for the item.

Had some very grateful customers though including a woman with a 306 who was going to be charged £35 to have a stereo fitted and when it took me a whole 2 minutes to do the job there was no way I could charge her that much. I reckon most of the people I did that favour for came back and spent more money in the long run anyway.

Don't know why they still insist on fixed rates without bothering to check how hard or how long the job will take first.

beanbag

7,346 posts

257 months

Monday 27th September 2010
quotequote all
Dog Star said:
I don't see why they shouldn't charge - what if someone wants a sidelight bulb changing on a Mk3 MR2 for example? yikes

(On a related note of mechanical numptiness - I know a chap who takes his bike to the dealer when his chain needs adjusting rolleyes)
At least he acknowledges the chain needs adjusting from time to time! However to be fair to him, if you have no mechanical know-how, adjusting a motorcycle chain can be quite tricky to do it right.

Fire99

9,862 posts

245 months

Monday 27th September 2010
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£5 sounds fair enough. Also the pro-rata thing is a bit misleading as they don't have a production line of cars waiting to have bulbs fitted so they're never going to be earning £60 each hour fitting bulbs.

Ninjaboy

2,525 posts

266 months

Monday 27th September 2010
quotequote all
cheadle hulme said:
Get them to change a headlight bulb on a Megane Scenic! It would work out at £5 per hour labour.
I'm sure i remember they exclude some models from fitting. Bumper of job aint it?

falkster

4,258 posts

219 months

Monday 27th September 2010
quotequote all
Nash_wrx said:
£5 Flat rate is not bad, try replacing side light bulbs on an Alfa 156 or facelift FTO,
is a headlight out job in both accounts.
My wife has just said the same thing!!! I'd have given them £20 for that!!

planetdave

9,921 posts

269 months

Monday 27th September 2010
quotequote all
If it's not a % of an hourly rate then what's the problem?

By the time you've put your coat on, been made to hang around by idiots and struggled with a potentially nightmare job half an hour could easily pass.

Even at minimum wage the tax and other deductions makes £5 marginal and more of a goodwill gesture than profiteering.