Elwenil
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A bubble balancer is a cheap way to balance tires yourself. One of the local garages is still in 1970s mode as they are an old Exxon station with the attached service garage that is still in use. sort of rare these days but they would mount stuff for me when I was younger and not able to get it done myself. Apparently they still do it as a friend had his snow tires mounted on the rear of his truck last week for a grand total of $12 for mounting and bubble balancing. They won't mount on custom rims as they have an old Coats tire changer but for $6 a tire it's a good deal. Larger shops have a lot more to deal with and can't afford the hassles and risks with dealing with oddball jobs. The dealership I worked for was very strict about what could be done and it was mostly all "by the book" due to liability. A dealership is a big business to lose because someone wanted to do a customer a favor in the shop.
You really can't blame the shop for wanting to protect themselves. It is true that they deal with "idiots" and they probably think you are one of them because it's not worth the legal fees and hassles to risk it. Your $100 of profit before costs doesn't compare to the thousands of dollars in losses to fight one lawsuit from such an "idiot". Randy is also correct in stating that the disclaimers are next to useless. Similar to locks that only keep out honest thieves, disclaimers only discourage the uncommitted complainer who isn't really willing to back up his threats with court action. Even if the lawsuit is frivolous, a lawyer will certainly take the case and take it to court which means the business must hire a lawyer to fight it even if a judge throws it out. The lawyers still have to be paid even though it all fell apart and all it ends up being is a big loss even though the shop may not have done anything wrong and not been found liable in a case.
You really can't blame the shop for wanting to protect themselves. It is true that they deal with "idiots" and they probably think you are one of them because it's not worth the legal fees and hassles to risk it. Your $100 of profit before costs doesn't compare to the thousands of dollars in losses to fight one lawsuit from such an "idiot". Randy is also correct in stating that the disclaimers are next to useless. Similar to locks that only keep out honest thieves, disclaimers only discourage the uncommitted complainer who isn't really willing to back up his threats with court action. Even if the lawsuit is frivolous, a lawyer will certainly take the case and take it to court which means the business must hire a lawyer to fight it even if a judge throws it out. The lawyers still have to be paid even though it all fell apart and all it ends up being is a big loss even though the shop may not have done anything wrong and not been found liable in a case.