Home » I’m Paying Someone $800 To Do Work On My 1966 Mustang And I Feel Weird About It

I’m Paying Someone $800 To Do Work On My 1966 Mustang And I Feel Weird About It

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I really could replace my 1966 Ford Mustang’s exhaust by myself. All the parts are available, and I’d just use a bunch of clamps to squeeze it all together; it really would be no big deal. And yet, here I sit at a muffler shop in Van Nuys, California about to be out $800. That’s a lot of scratch! And it hurts! I’m not sure I like this feeling, and I’m a little worried it could become the new normal.

As has been made clear in a number of my previous articles: My life has become a bit more complicated than it was before in Michigan, where I was a single man with only one job: make content to feed blogs. Delicious, juicy, click-inducing blogs. As a result of that life’s simplicity, I had lots of time, which meant I could wrench. Non-stop.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Nowadays I have more responsibilities as EIC of The Autopian, plus I have a more complex personal life. So time is hard to come by, which means I can’t wrench as much as I used to.

There are some jobs that I will not pay for. Brake work? For get it; I’m doing that myself. Engine work? I got that; I’m not going to spend thousands to have someone else do work that I may not have faith in. I know that, if I do the job myself, it’ll be done properly.

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There are some jobs, though, that require a specialist. Brazing up a bad radiator? I’ll have an expert handle that. Paint? Yup, an expert. Aligning my car? I could use a tape measure, but why not just have an expert with laser machines do that? Exhaust?

Well, exhaust I could just do myself. Check out the hole in this thing:

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As this exhaust shop here in Van Nuys points out: This thing needs a whole new exhaust. The pipe is as thin as paper. And, what’s more, I hate the location of that muffler; it’s right up against the fuel hose.

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I could get a whole new exhaust, though, for only $330! And I’d just put it all together and clamp it with some U-Bolts. It’d take some time (which I don’t have), but it’s really not that hard of a job.

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But I don’t have time. My brother (the spiritual owner of this Mustang) is flying in on Thursday, and I want him to enjoy his car for the first time (yes, he’s never driven it). So this shop is going to do an entire new exhaust — a big one 2.5-inch one with a Flowmaster 42441 repackaged ahead of the axle — for $800. A bit dear, yes, and I kinda regret not having haggled, but hey, it’s where we’re at.

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As someone who typically does his own work on his cars — including exhaust work – I feel really weird. As a certified cheap bastard, I hate spending money, but I need to remind myself: I do almost all other work myself. I’ll be swapping the master cylinder myself later today. That’s saving probably at least $150. I tune my own carbs, I do my own electrical — I can pay someone to do my exhaust every now and then, right?

Why do I feel so bad about this?

[looks into wallet]

Oh yeah, that’s why.

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Lardo
Lardo
3 months ago

So David I just came across this link. I have some guys out in San Bernardino who would have done it for half that. A whole street of multigenerational repair shops. Maybe an article? I went to get a brake job but the street has everything you could need. and it’s a little scary…
https://www.google.com/maps/place/San+Bernardino+Brake+Supply/@34.1371302,-117.3208363,18.98z/data=!4m10!1m2!2m1!1ssan+bernardino+brake+turning+shop!3m6!1s0x80c3525220ba49ef:0xf718fcad32496731!8m2!3d34.1380543!4d-117.3202559!15sCiFzYW4gYmVybmFyZGlubyBicmFrZSB0dXJuaW5nIHNob3BaIyIhc2FuIGJlcm5hcmRpbm8gYnJha2UgdHVybmluZyBzaG9wkgEKYnJha2Vfc2hvcJoBI0NoWkRTVWhOTUc5blMwVkpRMEZuU1VSVGQyVkhZMU5SRUFF4AEA!16s%2Fg%2F1tq8jv52?entry=ttu
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RedR58
RedR58
5 months ago

One of the most important questions to ask yourself in a situation like this is, “What is my time worth?”

I have to paint the 3 exterior doors on my house. They have layers upon layers of old paint and haven’t been repainted in years, save for some small patchwork painting I did after a “temporary” number of repairs to fix some superficial rot and damage to one of the doors due to its being directly exposed to the weather. I hate stripping old paint and repainting and even though I could do it, it would be a messy, annoying job and I just don’t want to deal with it. Luckily, I know a good, local painter who will do the job for a reasonable fee and it’s just a no-brainer. I have no problem doing minor plumbing and electrical work and stuff like that around the house, but for this kind of painting, I’m hiring that guy and will be happy to do so.

Last edited 5 months ago by RedR58
Super Bonk 3000
Super Bonk 3000
5 months ago

Depends. I’ll do stuff that does not require getting under the car or putting it on stands, if I feel competent. I use an extractor for oil changes. Otherwise it’s off to the shop.

The Chinesium water pump (prior owner, not me) in my E53 M54 X5 blew up in rural TN on Tuesday, luckily right at a gas station, and I had all my tools with me. This is a repair I could have easily done, WITH THE PARTS. There was nothing around this gas station. Nothing. I had it towed to the nearest town where I spent three days doom-scrolling at a cheap motel while the one shop that agreed to do it waited for the parts. The 4th of July holiday did not help with that delay. He did a great job and it was a lot cheaper than I feared. No issues driving back home.

Sure, I could have overnighted the parts to the gas station and slept in the car, but eff that.

So sometimes you don’t really have a choice.

Last edited 5 months ago by Super Bonk 3000
ADDvanced
ADDvanced
5 months ago

I do almost all my own work.

I outsource EVERY exhaust repair. It’s not worth it. They have all the best toys to deal with rusted crusty garbage.

Phil Layshio
Phil Layshio
5 months ago

As you get older and more established, you are going to find that your time is often well worth shop rates.

Andy Hoodward
Andy Hoodward
5 months ago

Engine work? I got that; I’m not going to spend thousands to have someone else do work that I may not have faith in. I know that, if I do the job myself, it’ll be done properly.

Unless it’s a Golden Eagle.

James Milton
James Milton
5 months ago

Welcome to adulting. Not to mention that the mechanic who worked on the car now has bragging rights.

Last edited 5 months ago by James Milton
JumboG
JumboG
5 months ago

I think you feel bad because you didn’t take this opportunity to put true duals on it.

Last edited 5 months ago by JumboG
Ixcaneco
Ixcaneco
5 months ago

Yes, we know you are an engineer. But consider some of the rest of us. I feel really proud that I could do LED headlights and real hood clamps on my Jeep. Most everything else is done my my local mechanic because if I do it, it will take three times as long and I’ll screw it up at least twice and it will end up costing more!

Spectre6000
Spectre6000
5 months ago

Can relate. Just came home day before yesterday with kid #2 while in the middle of an absolutely MASSIVE home repair project. Two (just sold the third last week) special interest cars needing attention, and my long/low floor jack is holding up part of the second floor of the house. Haven’t taken the plunge yet on shop labor, but absolutely can relate.

Manuel Verissimo
Manuel Verissimo
5 months ago

It’s OK to pay someone to do the work you have no time or will you do. It doesn’t make you any less of an enthusiast.

It does make you less of a cheap bastard but I’m not sure that’s a bad thing!

Joseph Kinney
Joseph Kinney
5 months ago

I just want to see and hear the results

Jakob K's Garage
Jakob K's Garage
5 months ago

So I guess this is the content you mentioned?

EricTheViking
EricTheViking
5 months ago

My mum has 2009 five-door Volkswagen Polo, and the power door lock mechanism in one door malfunctioned. Being mechanically inclined, I had planned to replace it with new one myself so I ordered the part and perused the YouTube videos for instructions. I kept deferring the work for days, then weeks, then months.

I contacted the independent repair centre about the labour for replacing the door lock: only €20. So, I took the car and door lock replacement to the centre and have the mechanic do it himself.

Ricardo
Ricardo
5 months ago

You will forgot the costs when your cruising with the top down listening to that burble.

Knowonelse
Knowonelse
5 months ago

I thought I had the time and inclination to fix the hole where the battery sits in my ’67 VW squareback. I removed the interior around the start of Covid, purchased needed parts with the government $, got a better paying job, bought more parts. Found a place to sandblast the whole car, found a shop where I could get training on bodywork and painting, and then things stalled. Nearby fires kept us on high alert, so no spark-generating action here in the California foothills. Getting our go-bags all set. Setting up the camper as our go-vehicle. Then the realization that I don’t have the time anymore. So soon, we will tap into some funds and I’ll be shopping around for a body shop to do the work. Disassembly and re-assembly I want to do and will find the time to do it. I don’t have time to learn bodywork and painting anymore.

MattyD
MattyD
5 months ago

Yet another self-indulgent story about hand-wringing over nothing. To me these stories always seem to be make-work, or maybe to fill a content quota.

It’s pretty simple: Got the time and inclination to do it yourself? Or need to save money? Go to town. Else pay someone to do the work for you.

Last edited 5 months ago by MattyD
I Heart Japanese Cars
I Heart Japanese Cars
5 months ago
Reply to  MattyD

Agree. The man with two i3s is complaining about having more money than time. I wish I had this problem.

R53forfun
R53forfun
5 months ago
Reply to  MattyD

100%. And with the YouTube-esque top shot? Good grief. It’s called being an adult, and being fortunate enough to make choices.

I guess my issue is with so-called cheap bastards but in DT’s case I feel like that’s either a shtick or a crutch, or maybe both, but it gets goddamn old.

Sorry not sorry for the rant.

Rollin Hand
Rollin Hand
5 months ago

David, it’s OK. Sometimes the best option, when taking everything into account, is hiring out the work.

I was looking at a possible project car online, and had to ask myself if I would realistically get it done in two years. The answer was no, so I let it pass.

A wise friend of mine says that we can have money or time, but not both. I don’t think that’s an absolute, but it is pretty accurate.

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