Senin, 31 Agustus 2015

Register now for Crestview Auto Service Saskatoon Ladies car care clinic


Crestview Auto Service is hosting a FREE Ladies Car Care Clinic in Saskatoon
Learn how to check oil, tires and much much more!
September 29, 2015,  6:30–9pm
Register early, limited seating

We will be accepting donations to the Canadian Red Cross Society Anti-Bullying Program: all donations over $20 are eligible for receipt. Crestview Auto Service will match                                        the combined total of all donations up to $1000

Kamis, 20 Agustus 2015

We guarantee your car will be fixed right, on time, and within budget.

We guarantee your car will be fixed right, on time, and on budget




That is a common statement in the auto repair world.  It sounds great, but how realistic is it? Auto repair is one of the top sources of consumer complaint, with most complaints being repairs that are not right, not on time, not on budget, or some combination of the three.  Which is off base - the repairs or the expectations?

In my opinion, the requirements to complete a job can only be known once the car has been dismantled enough to fully understand what’s needed and how much time and material will ben required. The hard truth is, we are in the business of repairing things, and just as in repairing people, there can always be surprises and complications.  

Motorists often misunderstand what service professionals can know. For example, we look at a car with worn tires and we say, new tires are $xxx.  It seems simple to price out tires, mounting, and balancing.  But what if the tires are dismounted and one of the rims turns out to be cracked?

Suddenly we have a $500 complication – a new rim is needed.  We can’t put the broken rim back on the car because it’s unsafe, and the motorist is left with no choice but to buy a new rim.

Most shops would have quoted a set of tires without any teardown at all.  And they would be very likely to have a customer relations problem when the broken rim was discovered.  This is not a common occurrence – 99% of tire repairs proceed smoothly.  But it can and does happen.

The question is, what can mechanics do about it?  In my opinion we start by setting the correct expectation.  We tell people that tires are $xxx, but there could be surprises.  The rim is one example; as cars get more complex the service complications become more numerous and more common.

You don’t get a promised cure at a guaranteed price at the doctor’s office.  You may pay x dollars for a certain treatment, but there's no guarantee that's all you need to be cured. You may need a lot more. You may be incurable. Why is car repair different?  It’s not, but people mistakenly assume it is. To a large extent that’s because mechanics set unattainable expectations and then they allow themselves to be painted in an unfavorable light for not living up to an impossible standard.

The way we correct that is by being clear what we can control in the offered service, and what we can’t.  Tires are a commodity; we can quote the price for different brands.  Mounting is a standard service too; we can quote time to mount tires on the rims we see.  Most of the time, that’s all that’s involved in a basic tire job. But when we give the motorist those figures we have a duty to inform them of the possible complications.  Some will say, what’s the worst case?  That’s impossible to answer most of the time.  In medicine the worst case is, you die.  In car repair the worst case is, you need a new car.

99.9% of the time those dire complications never come to pass.  But people get old and die, and so do cars.  Treatment and service outcomes will not always be good.  The best we can do as service managers is to disclose what we can, and paint a realistic picture.

Doesn’t the customer always have the last word?  That can be a misconception.  Take the example of the broken wheel rim.  Once discovered, we cannot undo the discovery, nor can we always retrace the steps to get there.  The customer may say “put it back like it was” but sometimes we can’t. The forces to mount and dismount the tire may turn a cracked rim into a cleanly broken one.  There may be no path but forward, and the only choice the motorist has is to buy a new or used wheel rim.  Using the rim he arrived with may simply not be an option.

We may take one thing apart for repair, only to see another broken thing beside it.  If that broken thing is a possible safety hazard, we place ourselves at risk if we do not fix it, so the customer in that case does not have the ability to decline a repair that would compromise safety. They can of course halt the whole job and tow the car away, but that does not do them much good.  The newly discovered safety hazard becomes part of the current repair cost, no matter who does it.

The only options then are abandoning the car, fixing it now, or fixing it later.  At one time cars were simple, and “fix it myself” was an option for many owners but with today’s need for dedicated test computers and special tools it’s a rare owner who has that option.

Here’s the hard truth:  Taking a car apart to evaluate damage may render it inoperative until fixed. Hospitals warn patients in advance when they undertake risky procedures.  Those of us in the auto service business have a responsibility to do the same.

Another common situation is the multi step repair.  Here’s an example:  A car comes in with an inoperative oxygen sensor, and the check engine light is on.  We see the failed sensor and replace it.  A week later the light is on again.  This time the newly repaired oxygen sensor is sniffing an out of range condition, and we repair that next.   It was not possible to see repair #2 without the prior completion of repair #1.  Whenever we repair engine lights we always warn motorists that more than one round may be needed because there are a thousand things that can illuminate that simple light, and they may reveal themselves one by one.

If this sounds complex, costly, and scary, I agree!  Yet it is the world we live in.  Some motorists would accuse me of making excuses in this essay, to which I would ask: Do you say that to your doctor?  Medical treatment and car repair are the two services most of us buy with some regularity.  Medicine is notoriously unpredictable in its outcomes, and costs have skyrocketed in recent years.  Car repair costs have risen too, but to a much lesser degree, and I submit that our outcomes are often more predictable. The fact is, service is more complex than most people know, and the best we can do is predict what will happen "most of the time."  

I've explained this to people, only to have them say, "A good mechanic won't have those problems.  It's the incompetent people that are the problem!"  Competence is a big issue in the auto repair field, and in the absence of standards and certification, a qualified tech is hard to find.  But the thing is, the most competent mechanic in the world still can't see inside your car without taking it apart.  None of us have x-ray vision.  Surprises and complications happen to the best of us.  To say otherwise is to deny reality.

From the shop’s perspective, our duty is to keep our training up to date and make sure we have the latest tools for the jobs we undertake.  We need to use our best abilities to diagnose vehicles, and report our findings promptly and clearly.  We need to be at the top of our game, and do our level best to get good outcomes.  At the same time, we have to be clear to our clients with respect to what may go wrong and why, and what we can do.

That is particularly true for a shop like ours, where we specialize in difficult jobs, and may of the cars we work on are referrals from other shops.  The "easy fixes" have already been tried, without success.   How does one estimate what it will take to go forward to the end?  Many times, we can't.  We can only price each step as we take it.

Often we take step 1 without even knowing what step 3 might be, or if there will be a step 4 or 5.  We have to be flexible and figure a path as we go.  Medicine and other complex diagnostic processes work in a similar manner.  You do a test, and that leads to another test, and a treatment, and eventually - you hope - to a fix or cure.


Cars are complex and service is specialized.  Not every mechanic can fix every car.  In a big shop like hours there are techs who specialize in certain brands (like BMW,) and others who specialize in certain procedures (like convertible tops.)  Knowing what we know, and what we don’t, is always a challenge and an exercise in humility.




(c) 2015 John Elder Robison
John Elder Robison is the general manager of J E Robison Service Company, celebrating 30 years of independent Rolls-Royce, Land Rover, BMW, Jaguar, and Mercedes restoration and repair in Springfield, Massachusetts.  John is a longtime technical consultant to the cr clubs, and he’s owned and restored many fine machines.  Find him online at www.robisonservice.com or in the real world at 413-785-1665

Reading this article will make you smarter, especially when it comes to car stuff.  So it's good for you.  But don't take that too far - printing and eating it will probably make you sick.


NCO’s drive pays off in a novel auto


I love this newspaper article about Norm Olsen, Sr.'s custom car. It's a great read. Now you know where Norm gets it from! Enjoy! ~ Heidi




NCO’s drive pays off in a novel auto


SUBIC BAY, NB, R.P. –
       “I don’t want something that rolls off the production line that 50,000 other people have,” said Air Force T. Sgt. Norm Olsen.
       Olsen, a food inspector assigned to the naval hospital here, can make that claim about his car. He drives a bright red 1932 Ford convertible, which is propelled by a 1966 Chevrolet Super Sport V8 engine. The whole thing sits on a Chevy chassis.
       The 35-year-old airman bought the Chevy, then took it to a man in Cavite who transformed the body into a replica of an old time Ford.
       “None of the parts came from Ford,” said Olsen. “The only things that may have come from an antique car are the door hinges.
       “Most of the parts came from the States. I ordered parts through J.C. Whitney and J.C. Penney’s - like the mag wheels, the lights, the steering wheel, the gauges, the stainless steel tubing – everything that’s mass produced.”
       The shop in Cavite refashioned the body using ball-peen hammers, cutting shears and welder.
       Olsen took the Chevy to Cavite in March 1975 and brought it back to Subic in October. He rebuilt the engine at his house.
       He paid the body man in Cavite 8,750 pesos, or about $1,268.
       The convertible top and upholstery was done in Manila, but the materials came from the States.
       He paid the Navy Exchange $514 to paint the car bright red. “They did beautiful work.”
       The whole thing cost Olsen $4,500.
       Few people in this are have actually reproduced a car such as Olsen’s, but he was turned on to the idea by someone who did.
       He saw a car similar to the one he drives now soon after arriving in 1973. “I told my wife that anyone that would bring a car like that over here is crackers,” said Olsen. “So one day I saw the guy who owned it and I asked why he brought it over here. He said he didn’t, that he built it. He took me up to Cavite and introduced me to the people, and I got fired up on the idea.”
       The biggest problem, Olsen said, was getting parts from the States. “Even as much advance time I gave myself to get parts from the States, it wasn’t enough. It took me from three to 12 months to get all the parts.”
       “The guys in the garage asked me what I would do if someone offered me a new Cadillac for my car. I told him I would turn the offer down,” said Olsen. “What value can you place on a year of your life?”
       “Even if it didn’t take me a year of labor, a lot of it was mental. I was tied up worrying about the car, writing letters, going over to Pass and I.D. and talking to the customs people to make sure there would be no problem shipping it back to the States.”
       Olsen is determined not to sell the car, and he’s doubly determined not to let anyone take it from him. He’s installed an auto burglar alarm that emits a siren when anyone so much as touches the running board.
       “I copied all the original serial numbers,” he explained. “In fact, I covered one of the serial numbers up with body putty and paint. If anybody rips that car off, they can erase all the serial numbers they want, but I’ll know where that one is.”
       Ironically, Olsen thought one night his whole project was going up in smoke.
       “So I could bring the car home, they did a hurry up job on the wiring,” he related. “We were up on the zig-zag road and it started raining. The windshield wiper wires overheated and melted the insulation. Smoke started boiling out of the car. I was terrified! I had a vision of the car going up in smoke.”
       Fortunately for Olsen, only the windshield wipers were affected. All the other electrical systems worked, and he got home OK.
       And today he drives a car which most certainly did not roll off the assembly line. “That car,” Olsen said, “has my name written all over it.”

By PO 1.C. Paul Long – S&S Philippines Bureau

*This article was originally posted in the Pacific Sunday paper in Manila, Philippines in 1976.*


Minggu, 16 Agustus 2015

Best Car coating_with best cost effective


Best car coating comparison

Time after time consumer is searching about what is the best car coating.
There are people like to support Japan product or German product. Some car coating seller use to mention only Japan make coating, or Korea manufacturer is the biggest one.

But so many story which one we be listening to?

With the reverse engineering technology ability to be performed now a days , there is no longer secret recipe for car coating as well as car wax industry.

Great thanks to Tevo company , local Malaysia production of chemical item shown to me about their experiment of coating hardness sample.
I would like show those photos taken here:


First is the S36 series of coating sample, hard rock glass harden outlook:



Secondly is the S60 series of coating sample, hard rock glass harden outlook:


The chemist used to generate the SIO2 ingredient to 9H performance content:
Unfortunately that the 9H glass coating is the easiest to get surface crack when faced any pressure hit.
And it was tested by lab chemist.
The result chemist confirmed is 9H is the lack of elasticity coating whereby 7H or less coating are more Elastic. Whereby elastic is more suitable for car coating.

But there are times where some detailers or reseller claim with 9H hardness of car coating?
Better is time for you to re-think again the possibility.

We offered the testing tool here to test out the hardness:
Hardness Pencil from Japan:

Or the surface press D hardness testing from China:

**Caution! your car coating might be scratched or crack if your coating is lack of hardness!


It's time to rethink again? Yes.
think of how reasonable is hardness of coating? and how realistic is this?

Thanks to Chemist by local lab production.
What Tevo produced?
Read below:

Tevo used to export coating to numbers of countries, but now Tevo will focus back to our local country Malaysia.
Watch the side by side comparison of Cquartz vs Tevo. Tevo is confident enough to take up the challenge. If to choose a side to stand for. I will definitely give a big hand over to Tevo, our local production which can deliver an international quality product in Automotive industry!

Full premium set of Tevo coating available here:

See how we deliver S36 Coating work here, by Kalex Car Detailing:






Below is a simple walk-through table about wax/coating:
Parameters Wax(ALL brands/range) Polymer coating SIO2 Glass coating
Hydrophobicity Good Good Best
Glossy effect Best Good Best
Weather Resistance Normal Months Acid & Alkaline Resistance
Durability Week - Months Months Years
Hardness No No Yes
Scratch Resistance No Weak Very Good
Solvent Resistance Remove upon contact Remove upon contact Not removable after Crystalization
Easy Cleaning No No Yes
Elasticity No No Yes
Best dust repellent ICE Turtle No Tev-tech, Keho
Cost effective Turtle No Yes
Easy application Turtle No TAC
Parameters Ceramic coating Normal sealant Sealant coating
Hydrophobicity Best Good Best
Glossy effect Good Good Best
Weather Resistance Acid & Alkaline Resistance Normal Good
Durability Years Months Years
Hardness Yes No No
Scratch Resistance Very Good Weak Normal
Solvent Resistance Not removable after Harden Remove upon contact Remove upon contact
Easy Cleaning Yes No Yes
Elasticity Not No No
Best dust repellent No No ICE shine lock
Cost effective No Yes Yes
Easy application No Yes ICE shine lock




Honest to say, It depends on which is our consumer preference here.
To get a premium car coating, I suggest you SIO2 with elasticity coating: Tech-tech S36 ,S60/ Japan Extreme Gloss Keho. Both are premium grade high performance Auto Coating range.

To get a easiest car sealant coating, easy apply and last for a year, I suggest you the Turtle wax Smart-Shield Technology Ice Shine Lock sealant coating.

Te get the easiest coating in this world, spray and wipe easy instant coating, I suggest you the TAC Korea Premium Glass Coating.


Read our sample detailing result from our customer about S36 here. [Click]

S36,S60 available for sale here. [Click]








Sabtu, 15 Agustus 2015

Turtle_the_strongest_in_China_detailing_industry

Turtlewax Professional series that famous in UK/Europe as well in China. Now available in Malaysia!



*Do you know how big is Turtlewax in China? and some Europe countries. Do you know that some countries offered Professional range of Turtle professional detailing as well in Asean / ANZ?




Same question again, how did China detailing industry rated for Turtlewax there?
I had captured some samples which will gave us more clue:





First thing first, it was rated as best selling car wax ever, with super high sales volume among all:


With top 2 ranking of votes among all brands!





With Sample forum article/sharing:











With Sample forum article/sharing:

With Sample forum article/sharing:









With Sample forum article/sharing:











With Sample forum article/sharing:






With Sample forum article/sharing:


With Sample forum article/sharing:


With Sample forum article/sharing:






Something you might interested to know:













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