Marauder
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Marauder
Both quotes/estimates say estimate at the top of the sheets, actually they both have the same estimate number on them. The president of the company and I both refer to these documents as "quotes" which may or may not be important at the end of the day. I have totalled up the equipment, at advertised prices and came up with $64,700.00 plus the quote has $1640 or $2706 for unnamed parts, which I assume are wire and connectors. So that is 67,400.00 for equipment and parts, I do have another $1500 that I agreed to for moving the autopilot mode selector which is mostly labor. So that puts us at $69,000.00 plus labor. The original quote/estimate was for $84,000.00 plus the autopilot mode controller $1500.00, should be $85,500 plus we had an interior shop remove and re-install the headliner, $1000?. Anything between $87-90K would be fine with me. The original quote was $11,500 in labor, later quote was $31,487.00 for labor. I truly understand the parts part of it, if we need a wobblygoogle connector to make the autopilot work with the G-600, I'm OK with that, but the labor is much easier to control.
And today was the end of the 6th week.
John - this is a gut wrenching process and I know what you are going through. The distinction between a quote and an estimate is very real. I found a site that provided good clarity on the differences:
Quotation Vs Estimate, What is The Difference Between an Estimate and a Quotation?
The differences in an estimate and a quote are very similar with one important difference. An estimate is a rough guess on how much something will cost without taking it apart to look at it. They base a price on what they can see is wrong. For example, if you take your car for an estimate for brakes pads and they give you the price for the pads plus labor to install. But when they take the wheel off and see that your rotors are worn to the ground they revise the estimate because there needs to be more work done.
A quotation is exactly how much something is going to cost you. The brake pads are a perfect example. You want a price on what the job is going to cost you when all is said and done. Ask for the quotation in writing and make sure that they will honor the quotation too. If a company refuses to put a quotation in writing then don’t let them do the work that usually means they are a little bit shady. An honest company or contractor will always put a quotation in writing.
The challenge with an estimate is that it is open ended. And that is a challenge in avionics. When I had my avionics upgrade quoted, I let them have access to my plane to evaluate it and provide the quote. I did not want any surprises since I had a fixed budget and I needed to know what it was going to cost me. I went to 5 shops and they all provided either an estimate or quote. The problem was that it ranged over $8k on a $32k job. Most of the variability was in the labor but even on the hardware, there was a substantial swing in price. Two of the shops refused to quote the work and I took them off my list.
If you trust the shop, they should be keeping you updated on unexpected findings or needed additional work. But that is the risk, if they find something that is a showstopper and you are working off of an estimate you have no recourse other than to accept it. The shop that did my work was spot on in this regard. There were no additional "surprises" for the original quoted work. I do know they did need to eat at least one. The additional work I had done was for add-ons like the flight director. It was not on the original quote because I did not ask for it (I wasn't aware my my AP supported it). They presented the option to me and I signed a separate quote for it.
If they intend to keep you as a customer, they will do right by you. And with the way the internet works, it is just bad business to take advantage of a customer when the whole world is watching...
Oh and by the way... my plane went in for the upgrade in mid October and I got it back on Christmas Eve...