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Creepy Install on a V6 Eclipse...
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<blockquote data-quote="audioholic" data-source="post: 3613320" data-attributes="member: 549629"><p>You are a professional installer and you think a wire that goes to a door is possibly in the same circuit as a wire going to a subwoofer? //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wow.gif.23d729408e9177caa2a0ed6a2ba6588e.gif</p><p>1) You agreed to work on the car.</p><p></p><p>2) You did not assess any damage to the system, and report it to your supervisor, before starting to dig into it.</p><p></p><p>3) You shrugged off a real problem, in the stereo, as 'mysterious' and went on your merry way.</p><p></p><p>4) You've done nothing but make excuses why you held zero responsibility for the situation, ever since.</p><p></p><p>5) Worst of all, you recognize not one single mistake you made in this situation.</p><p></p><p>Hey, we all screw up. IMO, and several other people here, you probably handled the situation badly. Guess what? Instead of making excuses here, you'd probably save alot more respect from people if you would have just said 'yeah my bad, I should have done more' and acted as if you learned from your mistake. Instead you walk around as if everyone else is responsible for your actions. Your boss should have known better than to accept the job. Your boss should have known the problems that came up were pre-existing, not your fault. The other installer should have talked to the customer, known what was going on, hooked up a better ground. The customer should have known better, in oh so many ways. Yep, everyone in that story was a royal f<em>u</em>ck up, except you. You were perfect, right?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="audioholic, post: 3613320, member: 549629"] You are a professional installer and you think a wire that goes to a door is possibly in the same circuit as a wire going to a subwoofer? [IMG]//content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wow.gif.23d729408e9177caa2a0ed6a2ba6588e.gif[/IMG] 1) You agreed to work on the car. 2) You did not assess any damage to the system, and report it to your supervisor, before starting to dig into it. 3) You shrugged off a real problem, in the stereo, as 'mysterious' and went on your merry way. 4) You've done nothing but make excuses why you held zero responsibility for the situation, ever since. 5) Worst of all, you recognize not one single mistake you made in this situation. Hey, we all screw up. IMO, and several other people here, you probably handled the situation badly. Guess what? Instead of making excuses here, you'd probably save alot more respect from people if you would have just said 'yeah my bad, I should have done more' and acted as if you learned from your mistake. Instead you walk around as if everyone else is responsible for your actions. Your boss should have known better than to accept the job. Your boss should have known the problems that came up were pre-existing, not your fault. The other installer should have talked to the customer, known what was going on, hooked up a better ground. The customer should have known better, in oh so many ways. Yep, everyone in that story was a royal f[I]u[/I]ck up, except you. You were perfect, right? [/QUOTE]
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