Locate an Auto Repair Shop in Mesa, Colorado

Now that you've bought that beautiful new car, how do you plan to take care of it? When the need for vehicle maintenance or accident repair arises, Edmunds.com features a national directory of auto repair shops to help you locate a trustworthy mechanic in your area. Search our listings of auto repair shops in Mesa, Colorado and compare prices and services to find the best deal at the most convenient location. With all the time and effort that went into buying your new car, it's important to find an auto repair shop you can trust.

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Mesa, Colorado Auto Repair Shops

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Maintenance & Repair

Mesa, CO Car Consumer Discussions


Re: BMW rant [busiris] by cdnpinhead on Sun May 08 16:37:54 PDT 2011

I can only wonder how many prospective buyers RFT's have run off from BMW... Well, I'm one, but the anti-DIY bias and the reluctance to bring the smaller diesels w/ manuals over here sealed the no deal. It's not bad enough that the dipstick was replaced by an unreliable (for the first year or so) expensive oil level sensor; nowdays when it's time to replace a battery it can only be done at the dealer, thanks to how the computer(s) need to be synched. Granted, with the battery in the trunk it doesn't come up so often as it does in most cars. However, here in AZ batteries fail more often due to the heat, and if I can't stop at the nearest AutoZone or Checker or whatever in the middle of a Sunday afternoon to replace a battery, that's just one more nail in the BMW coffin, at least for me. How long will it be until the hood is hermetically sealed? It may as well be now.

Re: Floor finale [richard64] by cdnpinhead on Sat May 07 17:22:35 PDT 2011

Just funnin'. :D Glad you're feeling better. We got a 52 inch Sharp LCD back in January (Super Bowl discount season for TVs) for $950 and love it. I put son #3 and his wife, who are both avid and talented online shoppers, on the task of finding us a good TV for a good price, and they did. The guys here appear to be doing much the same for you. Many of the TVs are graded down for sound quality, but so long as you're going to use a separate receiver/theater sound system it's irrelevant. None of this stuff is really off-topic. Nowhere does it say "Stories from the Car Sales Frontlines," now does it?

Re: Floor finale [richard64] by cdnpinhead on Sat May 07 15:33:00 PDT 2011

They were the same on all sights that I checked. . . Tsk tsk.

As I Not So Much. . . by cdnpinhead on Wed May 04 17:58:22 PDT 2011

approach being ancient as blow past it, I note the validity of the "whatever is old is new again" concept. Hardwood floors were all I saw in Colorado as a child in new (moderately upscale) construction. Great big 45-degree angle-hammering devices stitching the strips to the subfloor, followed by collosal belt sanders and 2-3 days of finishing. Standard stuff, back in the day. Then came wall-to-wall carpet, followed by ceramic tile escalating in size to approximately the size of a card table (remember those?), followed by laminated faux hardwood flooring, followed by old-school strip-nailed real hardwood floors. Stand by for the return of wall-to-wall carpet. They'll call it something different, and the lemmings will pay dearly for it. Oh boy.

Re: - [shipo] by cdnpinhead on Wed May 04 17:38:16 PDT 2011

Nice story -- good to hear. I got a similar (but much more muted) response at Gatwick when I requested a manual transmission (rowed with the left hand there) diesel vehicle with my corporate National account. There are still some of us out there, and we breed. All four of my kids drive manual transmission cars -- their spouses, not so much. In a few years I'll go to work on the first of the grandchildren, with her dad as my co-conspiritor.

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