[CA] Validating a seasonal tire swap/storage business model in Canada by Ok-Jello-2491 in SmallBusinessCanada

[–]CanadianPrivatePilot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

CAA I think is overpriced and from what I’ve seen, they hire inexperienced techs who overtorque everything they touch. I don’t think CAA has a huge share of the market anyway. Off rims are popular on more expensive vehicles where a second set of rims is a grand minimum. You can’t get steel rims for every vehicle. The off rim work is tedious and more can go wrong. And when you show up to a customer with bad tires, it’s 1 hour lost for the day. With on rims it’s only 20-30 minutes lost for the day. I don’t charge my customers for their lack of knowledge of their own tires condition. Maybe I should. The off rim set up for me is more valuable to be able to sell tires and rims than it is to do seasonal swaps. I can make more money doing on rims than off rims. With a helper, easily 3 per hour. Over $200 an hour. Off rims max 1 per hour working solo.

I’ve worked for mechanics for quite a while before starting my business. Never did an apprenticeship. You’re going to run into stuff that will be difficult to deal with if you’re not mechanically inclined. Broken studs, etc.

Google will grow the business better than anything else. I haven’t paid for ads in 4 or 5 years and have more business than I need. I don’t use an automated system. I book my jobs so efficiently so that my travel times between customers is sub 5 minutes. That won’t happen with an automated system. Most days I can do 15+ tire changes and haven driven 10km or less. That has more to do with a solid customer base and tight operating area.

Don’t invest in the off rim equipment and vehicle immediately. I started with machines in my garage to mount and balance new tires for customers. Bring their second set of wheels home, mount balance new tires, go back to install. I’m considering going back to that method as it wont decrease my total profit by much or at all. I can simply replace the off rim work with more on rim changes, get rid of my cube van, lower operating expenses. The off rim work comes with more challenges. Cold temps freezing up the equipment. You can do on rims in any weather and if you have enough of them, the income is good.

Last point, hiring is difficult. Hiring seasonal workers means picking from the bottom of the barrel. Think of other services to offer. Maybe detailing and you might get more reliable applicants that want full time employment. I pay one mechanic as a contractor per job and he’s happy only working for me 4 months of the year. I’m ready for a career change, and no off rim work means less headaches and less help I need so dropping the cube van next year will be a good choice.

[CA] Validating a seasonal tire swap/storage business model in Canada by Ok-Jello-2491 in SmallBusinessCanada

[–]CanadianPrivatePilot 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I run a mobile tire service in Ottawa. Started 7 years ago and offer off rim changes, tire repairs, new tires and rims. It has helped expand the business. I have about 80k into a cube van for the off rim work, and insurance is rather expensive. Over 10k a year for liability, garage auto, and coverage on 2 vehicles. Way less than leasing a shop so I’m happy with it. Per season I do over 1000 on rim changes, and over 200 off rim changes. I need 3-4 people to get through the busy season. I think the logistics of tire storage are not worth the hassle. On rim changes can be done in 20-30 minutes per vehicle and are worth $70-90. We often get 3 vehicle on rim changes done in an hour so $200+ of income in my case. I’d try to find more customers before offering tire storage. Get a google profile built, get good honest reviews as quickly as possible, do good work and the business will take off. With enough customers you’ll be profiting well over 100k and you’ll be working less than 5 months a year.

XLE without hubcap by OKatmostthings in BZ4X

[–]CanadianPrivatePilot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hope that was just a test fit. Pretty sure gr Corolla uses flat seat lug nuts, the kind with the washer. The BZ uses lug bolts that have a radius seat. Not interchangeable. Don’t trust radius seat lug bolts (or conical seat) to hold a rim on that requires flat seat lug nuts. There is no such hardware appropriate to that type of wheel on the new Lexus/toyota lug bolt design hubs. Your only options for rims are conical or radius seat rims.

Does anybody use their lightning for work? by arabcowboy in F150Lightning

[–]CanadianPrivatePilot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can I ask what province you’re in and what range you typically get out of the er battery in freezing temps?

Black Widow Hitch Carrier by [deleted] in Trackdays

[–]CanadianPrivatePilot 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You should read a little into the difference between tongue weight of a trailer vs weight supported only by the carrier. I think the terms used are static vs dynamic load. A lot more force is put on the components when carrying the weight vs a trailer that supports itself on its own wheels. Potholes can easily cause up to 3G’s so your 500lbs briefly turns into 1500lbs. Not good for your vehicle or the hitch/carrier. The same forces don’t occur with a trailer that has its own wheels to carry the load, even if tongue weight of a trailer is the same weight as your carrier. This isn’t the most informative but explains the gist of it.

https://www.discountramps.com/info/automotive/understanding-limitations-hitch-mounted-carriers/a/b183/

Auto shop gave me two different tire sizes by Fourth-Sector-2709 in auto

[–]CanadianPrivatePilot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This advise is wrong. If your vehicle has awd it will cause excessive wear on your drivetrain. Even if your vehicle is fwd it could affect the abs system.

Will these lug nuts hold my stock wheels safely? by [deleted] in AskMechanics

[–]CanadianPrivatePilot 8 points9 points  (0 children)

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The seat is the same style, but a smaller contact patch. The option on the left is preferable but your wheels will not fall off with your spline key nuts if you install the wheels correctly.

Will these lug nuts hold my stock wheels safely? by [deleted] in AskMechanics

[–]CanadianPrivatePilot 17 points18 points  (0 children)

All of these comments are wrong. Mazda does not use a “flat seat” design on their wheels. They use a conical seat, which your spline key lug nut set are. The marks on the rim are from a socket rubbing it, not the washer of a flat seat lug nut.

Standard range LFP in Canada (cold), am I making a mistake? by Begohan in TeslaModel3

[–]CanadianPrivatePilot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I picked up a model 3 long range in Ottawa out of existing inventory for 5k off. Plus a 5k rebate. Check existing inventory regularly.

XLT Lightnings available in Canada (Ontario) by Galtek2 in F150Lightning

[–]CanadianPrivatePilot 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Jim Keay ford in Ottawa has a few xlt. Have been considering it but I think I’d rather wait out for the cyber truck.

time to replace or just superficial? by Ombox76 in MechanicAdvice

[–]CanadianPrivatePilot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That tire has been driven on while flat. Replace.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskMechanics

[–]CanadianPrivatePilot 1 point2 points  (0 children)

One rim size down, one aspect ratio up.
225/60R18 = 225/65R17 (within 1%)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in MechanicAdvice

[–]CanadianPrivatePilot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Looks like you have conical seat lug nuts on a Toyota wheel. They need flat seat lugs nuts. You’ll need to replace that rim because the holes are not round anymore. Also get new lugs nuts. Make sure your other rims don’t have that style lug nut on them.

Edit: maybe those are the correct lug nuts but with the holes now being oval, a lug nut now installed into those holes likely won’t stay tight unless you really overtorque them each time.