Ultimately, in the final stages of such a “scam” – for example, when the customer is forced to buy an expensive new unit – as if in passing, he is also advised to remove the catalytic converter. Reportedly, it may fail soon, and since the car is still on the lift, it can be eliminated at the same time. At the same time, the car owner is told in plain text that if he leaves his bad car to the service, its costs will be taken into account when determining the final price tag for the services. After all, a used catalyst cartridge is a very expensive recyclable material.
Naturally, no car owner in such a situation will refuse such a “generous offer”, because the repairs have already “eaten” a lot of money. Then, for example, they install a brand new starter on the car (despite the fact that the old one actually worked quite normally) and at the same time remove the catalytic converter. Of course, the engine magically starts perfectly. The motorist is happy, even though he gave the gas station a lot of money. And he doesn’t suspect that he was elegantly and brutally ‘swindled’.
But it could be worse. I mean, it’s more expensive. When the catalyst is dying, oil consumption in the engine often increases sharply. At the same time, the last fuel begins to “eat”. With such symptoms, the “divorce” amounts to convincing the car owner that his car has problems with the cylinder-piston group and that engine overhaul is inevitable. That is a lot more expensive than the option with ‘non-working ignition and starter’. And again, as if by chance, the owner of the vehicle is convinced of the need to remove the old catalytic converter. The result of the “divorce” is the same: a lot of money overpaid to the repairers and a removed catalytic converter – all hidden.