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Re: Question re: Radio security codes
Doug,
I took my car in to get the seatbelt anchor height adjuster fixed(my dad
yanked on it too hard) and an alignment. It wasn't like the 30,000 miles
service or anything major.
Anthony Chan, First Hill, Seattle, WA, USA.
chan@seattleu.edu
92' 100 V6 Tornado Red.
On Tue, 17 Sep 1996, Doug Rudoff wrote:
> Date: Tue, 17 Sep 1996 13:54:25 -0700 (PDT)
> From: Doug Rudoff <drudoff@spry.com>
> To: quattro@coimbra.ans.net
> Subject: Re: Question re: Radio security codes
>
>
> >I bought my 92' 100 V6 with 23,500 miles on it from this lady who rarely
> >drove it and of course she didn't remember where she put the radio code,
> >she was joking she put it in such a safe place she forgot where it is. To
> >make a long story short, I called University Audi in Seattle, they told
> >me they could get me the radio code if I brought the car in since they
> >need to pull the radio out and look at the serial number so that they
> >could look it up from some database. I took my car in for service and
> >they got me the radio code. At first the service rep. said they wanted
> >to charge me $10 for it but I told him the assistant manager told me over
> >the phone that there would be no charge so he apologized and took the
> >item off my invoice.
>
> Wow! They (at University Audi) made me pay half an hour labor ($30) for
> this. Even when I made complained about it taking all of five minutes to
> do. Maybe if I was getting more than an oil change at the time they would
> have done it cheaply.
>
> Doug Rudoff SPRYNET / CompuServe Seattle drudoff@spry.com
>
>