Juan, many shops have flat rate lists by equipment type, and some qualifier such as "Guitar (solid state) Amplifier 50 watts or less $75 plus parts". It is popular in that it allows approval of estimates before actually taking it apart for diagnosis then reassembling for storage waiting for a detailed estimate to be approved.
Hourly rate works best with projects that are primarily labor with diagnosis such as building a snake.
We used an hourly rate of $65 for years and most estimates were 1-2 hours, but really minor repairs like correcting a broken solder joint or wiring an XLR cable/connector was usually free.
The reason for "free" involved being good PR but mostly because it was not a repair, so did not fall into the broad interpretation of warranty of work as customers believed a warranty to be. If a tube fails the next week and I had charged $15 to fix a solder joint, my losses covering the warranty of the entire amplifier is not worth the risk.
You can specify in a signed disclaimer that warranty only covers work performed but that clause only works when the customer can be expected to be knowledgeable that there are separate sections of a circuit that are somewhat unrelated.
They would accept that a transmission repair does not include warranty for headlights in a car but that does not work when, to a layman, everything in the amp chassis is one continuous circuit that you worked on.
In most places in the world the biggest concern with repairs or any other customer service issue is NOT whether you are possibly risking a $50,000 legal bill and court nightmare. When someone is disappointed or just thinks they can pull it off, in the US, the normal reaction is to seek a gigantic lawsuit settlement in the US.
Any work done has to be detailed and any parts used need to be detailed and charged for and proper tax charged. Doing so protects the shop, besides being a law in most states, also since there is a record, in writing that described what was done. That helps discouraging most people from suing if you can prove that your repairing the line cord was not repairing the speaker jack that the customer complains suddenly just broke a week after you worked on the amplifier.
So be happy that you are not doing repair work in the US. A disclaimer or detailed limited warranty policy does not end the shop's responsibility at the end of the shop warranty period, which really can give greif long after the normal shop warranty has expired if the customer's complaint includes a claim of a latent defect being installed in the unit during the repair.
Hourly rate works best with projects that are primarily labor with diagnosis such as building a snake.
We used an hourly rate of $65 for years and most estimates were 1-2 hours, but really minor repairs like correcting a broken solder joint or wiring an XLR cable/connector was usually free.
The reason for "free" involved being good PR but mostly because it was not a repair, so did not fall into the broad interpretation of warranty of work as customers believed a warranty to be. If a tube fails the next week and I had charged $15 to fix a solder joint, my losses covering the warranty of the entire amplifier is not worth the risk.
You can specify in a signed disclaimer that warranty only covers work performed but that clause only works when the customer can be expected to be knowledgeable that there are separate sections of a circuit that are somewhat unrelated.
They would accept that a transmission repair does not include warranty for headlights in a car but that does not work when, to a layman, everything in the amp chassis is one continuous circuit that you worked on.
In most places in the world the biggest concern with repairs or any other customer service issue is NOT whether you are possibly risking a $50,000 legal bill and court nightmare. When someone is disappointed or just thinks they can pull it off, in the US, the normal reaction is to seek a gigantic lawsuit settlement in the US.
Any work done has to be detailed and any parts used need to be detailed and charged for and proper tax charged. Doing so protects the shop, besides being a law in most states, also since there is a record, in writing that described what was done. That helps discouraging most people from suing if you can prove that your repairing the line cord was not repairing the speaker jack that the customer complains suddenly just broke a week after you worked on the amplifier.
So be happy that you are not doing repair work in the US. A disclaimer or detailed limited warranty policy does not end the shop's responsibility at the end of the shop warranty period, which really can give greif long after the normal shop warranty has expired if the customer's complaint includes a claim of a latent defect being installed in the unit during the repair.
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