Absolutely. Ask the tech if he'll ride with you and try to duplicate the symptoms.It is what it is, if you read a repair manual you will see one part can have multiple symptoms and one symptom can have multiple parts causing the issue, it's just the nature of the vehicles. Maybe take a ride with the mechanic so you know it's actually getting test driven
I got no where in the diagnosis and repairs. I sold the car as is for 1400$, paid 3200$ the year before. Not too big of a loss. There was no way to get the work done being a college girl.Hello deanazoon,
I was just curious if you got your car issue resolved? I read your thread and just wanted to check in. It's very frustrating (as a car owner) to get the runaround from a shop and pay hundreds of dollars for just a "maybe". On the other hand, intermittent issues are amongst the hardest to diagnose. I hope all is well with your car now and you're back on the road with no more headaches.
FYI, you can buy a Haynes manual for your car at any local auto parts store and learn how to maintain your vehicle. It's not hard to perform regular maintenance and it will save you tons of money on services or problems arising from neglect. I know this is not the reason behind your issue, or maybe it was (from the previous owner) but regardless, it's valuable knowledge to have.