Post by
slideshow »
https://forums.nicoclub.com/slideshow-u8135.html
Mon Oct 10, 2005 5:18 pm
I have noticed a lot of post showing up with people's bad experiences with truboost. About a year ago I dealt with them personally at their shop in Beaufort, SC and would just like to warn you folks to **STAY AWAY FROM THESE CROOKS!** Before you do any business with them please read my story. Hopefully NICO will reconsider them as being a site sponsor.
*** IF don't read the whole thing just read thelast paragraph for a quick semi-summary. ***
I brought my bone stock 240sx to truboost on April 16, 2004. Against my better judgment I purchased a very large amount of parts for the car from them and choose to have them install the parts as they came in. After having a long talk with Derek, he had me believing that this was a trust worthy shop. He wanted me to order all the parts from him instead of any other online web site (as I had originally planned) telling me that he gets better deals and would hook me up with a discount for buying so much. I went ahead with his plan believing that he was a cool and trustworthy guy. As time went by I noticed that the parts were coming in VERY slowly. Something like a part or two every few weeks. When I first brought the car to Derek he told me that it would be a two week start to finish job. Now he was saying that of the 30 or so parts I ordered (including the motor) only 3 or so parts were readily available. What eventually ended up happening, as months were passing by and we were still waiting on 90% of the parts to show up, is he just began trying to unload parts on me that that he could get better deals or that were laying around the shop already even if they weren't what I originally ordered. This usually meant UPGRADING and putting more money in his pockets. So at the end of 11 months (yes, that’s 11 months! Almost and entire year) they tell me that the majority of the parts are in and most of the parts have been installed on the car. After almost an entire year of waiting on parts to show up (some of which never did) they told me that the only thing left to do was to tune the car and I would be good to go. About a month passes before I decide to just go pick up the car. They were supposed to be tuning the car but when I showed up they couldn’t even get the car to start. They would say things like the car is just out of gas, even if the gas gauge was reading a half tank of gas. I picked the car up after it had stayed at Truboost for a little over a year and towed it to Epik Motorsports in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
The car wasn't at Epik Motorsports for longer than 3 days before I had a list of problems created by our friends at Truboost. Now, I won’t even talk about how Truboost hacked together some intercooler piping that had metal filings flying into the compressor housing of the turbo, or the charge for a new oil filter and spark plugs that weren’t on the car, or the dead wal-mart battery that wasn’t even sealed or bolted down to the floor in rear of the hatch and yet I was charged for a “battery relocation kit”. Hey, I’ll even let the fact that that battery relocation included having some 8-gauge wire zip tied to the fuel line that runs under the car. The fact that the car’s ignition timing was off a few teeth but yet they were still trying to tune the AEM EMS is fine also. The car also had oil leaking from the rear main seal. Since they had not notified me of that problem but, when I went and pick the car up they had some sand under the transmition to catch all the oil dippings, I’m guessing they had no plans of telling me about it or fixing it. But all that didn’t really get to me. The part that really got me was when they took a look at the injectors and the turbo kit. Now originally I ordered Nismo 740cc injectors ($540). Upon further inspection the shop found that he had installed some Holley injectors that can be picked up for about $50 a piece. On the turbo kit I gave truboost $2,800. At the time Enjuku was selling a t3/t04 turbo kit that consisted of a Garrett turbo a tial wastegate and a turbo-fab manifold. I told Derek that the enjuku setup was the one I wanted. Instead he throws an SS Autochrome kit (A.K.A: the eBay turbo kit) on the car with goes for around $450 for the turbo, mani, and, wastegate. The turbine shaft was already warped and had some serious play not to mention the ss autochrome wastegates are notorious for bleeding off excess boost fashionably late and the manifolds usually crack after a few months.
I tried to make things good between us by writing an e-mail to truboost saying that I was unsatisfied and didn’t appreciate the part substitutions he did. I didn’t mind the unfinished and sloppy work that was done but I wanted to receive the parts that I had paid my hard earned money for. He promptly replied back basically saying that since I pick the car up early and in “AS-IS” condition I was S.O.L (**** outta luck).
**So since I took the car "unfinished" (after it sat at their shop for over a year and now have parts on my car that I never ordered and that now need to be replaced IMMEDIATELY so that they don't jeopardize the reliability of my car) it is all my fault and everything would have been sunshine and rainbows if I let them finish this so called "work". Even though all I was told they needed to do was to tune the AEM EMS. Honestly I believe if I didn't go and pick my car up it would still be sitting at Truboost to this date.
Modified by slideshow at 4:28 AM 10/11/2005
Modified by slideshow at 4:39 AM 10/11/2005