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Posted: Sat Jul 18, 2009 11:37 am
by rayofleamington
I can't see how a new set of tyres should require a tracking reset anyway.
It's standard to offer a tracking CHECK. The problem is that if they don't have a clue, a car with good tracking is described as needing the tracking reset

Posted: Sat Jul 18, 2009 11:56 am
by Mogwai
There is the Automotive Technician Accreditation scheme its not foolproof but at least the person working on your car would have had at least a basic competency test or higher.
http://www.automotivetechnician.org.uk/
Posted: Sun Jul 19, 2009 10:16 am
by dp
linearaudio wrote:
I ended up speaking to a Mr Tom Farmer, Managing Director, in Scotland.
How long ago was this? Tom Farmer was the founder of KF (and a good bloke as it happens) but the company was sold to Ford in the '90s.
Posted: Sun Jul 19, 2009 11:12 am
by Dean
I think Ford sold it back to Tom at a hugely discounted price when Ford hit troubled times around 2002 ?
Posted: Sun Jul 19, 2009 12:12 pm
by linearaudio
dp wrote:linearaudio wrote:
I ended up speaking to a Mr Tom Farmer, Managing Director, in Scotland.
How long ago was this? Tom Farmer was the founder of KF (and a good bloke as it happens) but the company was sold to Ford in the '90s.
this was the nineties! I had no problem with him, it was the minions
Since then I have fitted my own tyres, as they were available to me through a trade link.
About six months ago I entered a well known chain to have a pair of decent tyres fitted to the wifes Xantia, which has a set of those Peugeot wheeltrims with the moulded chromed pretend wheel nuts as an integral part. Very realistic too, the lad
did comment that 22mm was an unusual nut size, I didn't twig what he meant until he tried to undo them with an impact wrench (they shear off taking a portion of the wheeltrim with them, by the way)
I'm sticking with DIY
