Vector
Full Access Member
I should have learned my lesson the last time I went there a few years ago when they overfilled my engine with about 3 quarts too many and I blew an engine seal.
The lure of a $15 oil change out the door brought me back. Anyway, I asked the manager not to let a rookie work on it and he assured me "only his top guys" would. Well sure enough I am watching through the window, and at least one of the guys was being trained. He determined I needed a new battery, which of course I did not because the previous owner had just replaced it within the last year(I confirmed at Autozone).
Anyway, we was the one also responsible for topping off the fluids, and he spilled anti-freeze all over the engine bay after putting too much in the reservoir. I know this because they used a suction device to extract some of it out(looked like a fancy turkey baster. The trouble is that when I looked at the engine bay later, the coolant spilled on my engine and hoses that he put in was green.
I know the stuff in there was reddish, probably Dexcool.
So I went back and spoke to the manager to tell him about the new battery recommendation that Autozone said I didn't need, and the coolant issue. He got defensive about the battery issue, as if he had been through this before, with trying to sell customers things they didn't need.
When I asked him why they didn't put Dexcool in, and that they shouldn't mix two different anti-freezes(what I've always heard), he claimed they did not carry Dexcool. He said theirs was "universal" and it could be mixed with any of the various varieties out there. When I raised my brow, he said "Jiffy Lube would not have something that was incompatible with other fluids, so I should trust him". This after his other tech confirmed that my battery was fine, and tried to clean up the engine bay for me. At least they didn't overfill the oil this time.
Aside from the overall story, anyone know if Jiffy Lubes anti-freeze is really "universal" like this guy claims? He said it was yellow, but it was clearly green. Regardless, I had always heard you don't mix them, and if you want to switch for whatever reason, you properly flush the old and put in the different type.
Thoughts and/or comment on this issue or your experience with Jiffy Lube in general are welcome.
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The lure of a $15 oil change out the door brought me back. Anyway, I asked the manager not to let a rookie work on it and he assured me "only his top guys" would. Well sure enough I am watching through the window, and at least one of the guys was being trained. He determined I needed a new battery, which of course I did not because the previous owner had just replaced it within the last year(I confirmed at Autozone).
Anyway, we was the one also responsible for topping off the fluids, and he spilled anti-freeze all over the engine bay after putting too much in the reservoir. I know this because they used a suction device to extract some of it out(looked like a fancy turkey baster. The trouble is that when I looked at the engine bay later, the coolant spilled on my engine and hoses that he put in was green.
I know the stuff in there was reddish, probably Dexcool.
So I went back and spoke to the manager to tell him about the new battery recommendation that Autozone said I didn't need, and the coolant issue. He got defensive about the battery issue, as if he had been through this before, with trying to sell customers things they didn't need.
When I asked him why they didn't put Dexcool in, and that they shouldn't mix two different anti-freezes(what I've always heard), he claimed they did not carry Dexcool. He said theirs was "universal" and it could be mixed with any of the various varieties out there. When I raised my brow, he said "Jiffy Lube would not have something that was incompatible with other fluids, so I should trust him". This after his other tech confirmed that my battery was fine, and tried to clean up the engine bay for me. At least they didn't overfill the oil this time.
Aside from the overall story, anyone know if Jiffy Lubes anti-freeze is really "universal" like this guy claims? He said it was yellow, but it was clearly green. Regardless, I had always heard you don't mix them, and if you want to switch for whatever reason, you properly flush the old and put in the different type.
Thoughts and/or comment on this issue or your experience with Jiffy Lube in general are welcome.
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