There is that word “just” again. You need to require them to report completion and to certify efficacy. Are you going to also require car brands to honor warranty repairs completed by a third party mechanic? What I’m attempting to point out to you is that this all requires a network and established agreements, not “just” some ad-hoc repair services.
I don’t see how an independent mechanic would be less likely to report completion of a recall repair than a dealership. It sounds like a similar process to safety and emissions inspections and service.
If they need to be Toyota-certified or something to do recalls, then great. Even better if that lets them do warranty work.
The manufacturer is not the one performing the recall repair right now, it’s the dealership, so I don’t understand what the difference is between having the dealership mechanic and the independent mechanic perform the work if they have access to the same resources.
The dealership is an effective partner and extension of the manufacturer. This is the relationship that’s been well established for decades. I’m finished with this discussion. You clearly don’t have the capacity to understand the business relationships required to make this new model work.
I understand that. What I’m asking is why the same processes extended to the dealerships cannot also be extended to independent mechanics, through some kind of certification process if necessary.
So we do just need to give non-dealership mechanics access.
There is that word “just” again. You need to require them to report completion and to certify efficacy. Are you going to also require car brands to honor warranty repairs completed by a third party mechanic? What I’m attempting to point out to you is that this all requires a network and established agreements, not “just” some ad-hoc repair services.
I don’t see how an independent mechanic would be less likely to report completion of a recall repair than a dealership. It sounds like a similar process to safety and emissions inspections and service.
If they need to be Toyota-certified or something to do recalls, then great. Even better if that lets them do warranty work.
Because it’s the manufacturers RESPONSIBILITY. Not the local mechanics’.
What is so difficult about this?
The manufacturer is not the one performing the recall repair right now, it’s the dealership, so I don’t understand what the difference is between having the dealership mechanic and the independent mechanic perform the work if they have access to the same resources.
The dealership is an effective partner and extension of the manufacturer. This is the relationship that’s been well established for decades. I’m finished with this discussion. You clearly don’t have the capacity to understand the business relationships required to make this new model work.
I understand that. What I’m asking is why the same processes extended to the dealerships cannot also be extended to independent mechanics, through some kind of certification process if necessary.