Is Your Local Dealer Good Or Bad???
#11
growing up we did most of our own maintenance on our vehicles unless it was out of our skill range, which meant it had to be major body work or weld repairs. My father was very good about spending his money locally. He made sure he bought what he could from the local parts stores and when he did need their help, they were more than willing to help and treat him right on the price. I learned a valuable lesson from that. Yes you can always find a better deal, saving a few dollars here and there, but at the end of the day, its the relationship you have with the people that makes the difference when the crap hits the fan.
#13
#14
5 stators in a year at a whole lot of money, on the last one they said we found the problem. needed a screw for windshield trim. would not sell a screw wanted me to buy new trim. needed locks for saddle bad on '92 bike. claimed could not get them bike too old. same lock fits 2013 and below tour pack.
I have no use for a harley shop.
I have no use for a harley shop.
#16
#17
growing up we did most of our own maintenance on our vehicles unless it was out of our skill range, which meant it had to be major body work or weld repairs. My father was very good about spending his money locally. He made sure he bought what he could from the local parts stores and when he did need their help, they were more than willing to help and treat him right on the price. I learned a valuable lesson from that. Yes you can always find a better deal, saving a few dollars here and there, but at the end of the day, its the relationship you have with the people that makes the difference when the crap hits the fan.
#18
I started with Harley dealers in 1969. I stayed with that particular dealership (three generations of family) until 2009 when they would not deal on a new bike - I bought from another dealership that had been in business since the 1960's (also three generations). but about 60 miles away. No complaints about either other than a 40-year customer not getting a break on price from the former.
My experience is that "old school" dealerships are far better than "new" dealerships that have started since the boom in Harley sales. Seems like the "new" dealerships are interested in only selling bikes, but the "old school" ones are interested in retaining customers and building their business. These are dealerships that are have remained in the same family ownership all those years.
Mostly, I spin my own wrenches - pretty much use the dealer for 50,000 mile rebuilds and parts.
I know, broad brush, but that's been my experience.
My former dealership has now sold and almost the whole staff turned over. This from looking at their web site. I haven't been back since they wanted MSRP and setup, etc. on the new bike.
Meathook: out
My experience is that "old school" dealerships are far better than "new" dealerships that have started since the boom in Harley sales. Seems like the "new" dealerships are interested in only selling bikes, but the "old school" ones are interested in retaining customers and building their business. These are dealerships that are have remained in the same family ownership all those years.
Mostly, I spin my own wrenches - pretty much use the dealer for 50,000 mile rebuilds and parts.
I know, broad brush, but that's been my experience.
My former dealership has now sold and almost the whole staff turned over. This from looking at their web site. I haven't been back since they wanted MSRP and setup, etc. on the new bike.
Meathook: out
#19
An individual's dealership experience is usually directly proportional to that individual's attitude going in. I've toured the country more than once, have visited over 100 dealers, have had work done at several around the country and can honestly say, I've never had a bad dealership experience. I've chuckled at price differences I've seen (1 dealer has bike for MSRP, 100 miles away and same bike is 2k over MSRP) but if people are willing to pay it, they will continue to sell them... it's called "business".
#20
I have been dealing with the same dealer, Rommel Harley (used to be Mike's Famous) in Smyrna DE for almost 10 years. They have always gave me good deals. I have never paid MSRP and have paid as low as $3500 under. Service has always taken care of any issue I have. I request the same mechanic work on my bike every time. That keeps me coming back. They used to have a pretty bad rap because they were one of those dealers that charged way over MSRP. But that was with the previous owner. It is always a pleasant experience going in there. Pretty much everyone knows me by name and I can stop by if I am bored on a rainy day just to shoot the chit about nothing in particular.