Lodi News-Sentinel

Mobile mechanics diagnose and fix cars at owners’ homes

- By Rick Popely

CHICAGO — When Peter Champlin, an auto mechanic for nearly 15 years, popped the hood on a 2003 Jeep Liberty, he fixed a leak with a new clamp on the lower radiator hose and installed a new ignition coil. The bill was $189.33.

Routine stuff for an experience­d mechanic like Champlin, who is certified by the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence as a master technician, with one exception: The repairs were done in the owner’s driveway in suburban Chicago, not in a repair shop or dealership service department.

At a time when few medical doctors still make house calls, a growing number of car doctors are driving to customers’ houses or places of business to perform repairs and maintenanc­e while the customers continue their usual daily routines.

For the customer, there’s no waiting around at a repair shop or shuttling back and forth to drop off and pick up the car. They come to you.

Independen­t mechanics began advertisin­g mobile services several years ago on Craigslist and similar sites. Now, though, startup companies have set up shop online offering mobile repair services, rosters of experience­d mechanics available seven days a week, instant online price quotes for a variety of repairs, and 12month/12,000-mile guarantees on parts and labor.

Champlin, for instance, works for Otobots, a company based outside Chicago that has mobile mechanics in Illinois, California and Texas and plans to expand into several more states in the next few years.

A more establishe­d and much larger competitor, YourMechan­ic, based in Mountain View, Calif., operates in most major metro areas and 33 states, with plans to add more areas in the near future.

Both claim to perform maintenanc­e and repairs at lower cost than dealership­s and repair shops.

Arun Simon, the CEO of Otobots and a co-founder of the company, said he came up with the idea three years ago after spending considerab­le time trying to find a mechanic on Craigslist. The solution, he thought, was to use technology to make it more convenient for consumers to find a mechanic and schedule service online and have the mechanic come to them.

“The biggest problem we’re solving here is the actual inconvenie­nce that is associated with the hours of waiting at a repair shop,” Simon said in a telephone interview.

The online scheduling process works like this: The customer enters the year, make, model and engine of the vehicle, chooses what’s needed from lists of available services and repairs and receives a price quote. If the customer decides to go ahead with the repair, he or she can choose among available time slots for when the mechanic should come. Customers have to enter a credit card number to schedule an appointmen­t.

If a customer’s car won’t start or the cause of a problem is unknown, Otobots charges a $64.99 diagnostic fee, and YourMechan­ic charges $70 to $80, depending on location.

For John Scalet, the owner of the Jeep Liberty that Champlin repaired, Otobot’s mobile service allowed him to keep working at home without taking time away from running his graphics and sign business.

“I wanted to try something a little different. I feel it’s safer than Craigslist. When you go online you can read the credential­s of the people who are going to be working on the car, so it’s not like you’re blind to the people that are working on it,” Scalet said.

Anthony Rodio, CEO of YourMechan­ic, said in addition to the convenienc­e factor, consumers like the instant online price quote with comparison­s to what local dealers and repair shops would charge.

“That price transparen­cy is a big part of our value propositio­n, because historical­ly consumers have felt that (auto repair) is a very opaque experience. They didn’t know what they were going to pay until after they dropped the car off and got a call a few hours later with an estimate that might not be the final bill,” Rodio said in a telephone interview.

 ?? TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Otobots mechanic Peter Champlin works on a 2003 Jeep Liberty in the vehicle owner's driveway in Streamwood, Ill.
TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Otobots mechanic Peter Champlin works on a 2003 Jeep Liberty in the vehicle owner's driveway in Streamwood, Ill.

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