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Fleet Work vs Auto Repair and Why Mental Health Needs More Attention | Riley Spence

Fleet Work vs Auto Repair and Why Mental Health Needs More Attention | Riley Spence

The Jaded Mechanic Podcast Apr 14, 2026 101 min
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About this episode

Riley Spence shares how his move from dealership service to a remote Labrador fleet/heavy-equipment role changed his outlook—more autonomy, better mentorship, and real-world fabrication and diagnostics. The conversation digs into why maintenance advice varies by region (dust, extreme temperature swings, poor fuel quality, long 4wd seasons), plus the practical realities of parts delays and customer communication. A major theme is mental health in the trade: toxic environments, burnout, and the importance of counseling and community. They also debate certification, modern diagnostics, and the dangers of rushing troubleshooting.

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Technical Too Afraid to Ask
Concept

heavy equipment

"[179.0s] So the company I work for, we're a construction company and we also maintained provincial hydro companies, automotive fleet and heavy equipment and stuff."

Heavy equipment is the big machinery used for construction and road work—things like loaders and other industrial machines. The speaker is saying their company maintains those too.

Concept

automotive fleet maintenance

"[179.0s] So the company I work for, we're a construction company and we also maintained provincial hydro companies, automotive fleet and heavy equipment and stuff."

Fleet maintenance is when a shop keeps a whole company’s vehicles working—like delivery vans, service trucks, or company cars. Instead of fixing one person’s car, they’re trying to keep the whole group reliable and on the road.

Term

snow clearing

"[189.0s] And we also maintain the road site going to Muskrat Falls energy project. So we are pretty big into snow clearing. We got a lot of loaders, a lot of two flyers right now and some sand trucks and stuff."

Snow clearing is the work of getting roads and lots usable during winter. It often involves using big machines and planning around storms so people can still get where they need to go.

Term

journeyman welder

"And I work with a. He's a journeyman welder and man to watch him. He's after teaching me how to aluminum."

A journeyman welder is a highly trained welding professional. They’ve learned the craft through training and practice, so their welds are reliable.

Term

TIG weld

"I've been practicing at the Tig weld with Tig weld and aluminum. Because when you Tig weld aluminum you don't have hole. Like when you start with a spool gun, you make a hole, right."

TIG welding is a careful, high-control way to weld metal. It’s often used for aluminum because it can make neat, strong welds when the technique is right.

Term

excavator

"They're putting in a new new bottom and back into an excavator. A 320 cat bucket."

An excavator is a big construction machine used for digging. Here, they’re talking about repairing the bucket area so it can keep doing its job.

Brand

Chev

"...there's an established Chev dealership here, and they get air freight. Next day, like, I order parts from a lot because Hydro Fleet is primarily Chev vehicles."

“Chev” refers to Chevrolet, a major General Motors brand. In the transcript, Chevrolet is central because the fleet is primarily Chevrolet vehicles, which affects parts availability and ordering channels.

Concept

four wheel drive

"Because here in Labrador you're in four wheel drive from the end of November usually till May."

Four wheel drive powers both the front and rear wheels. If you use it a lot for months, the drivetrain works harder and needs more careful maintenance.

Car

Silverado

"Every neighborhood group on Facebook's got the same thing. I saw a guy yesterday and he was like, he was complaining that the dealer wanted to charge $170 for an oil change on, I think on his brand new Silverado, right?"

The Silverado is a common Chevy pickup truck. They’re using it as an example of a vehicle people complain about when dealer oil changes cost more.

Term

engine locked up

"...they o ringed a filter and the engine left and of course the engine locked up."

If an engine locks up, it basically can’t turn anymore because something inside failed badly. That usually means the engine needs major repair or replacement.

Car

Chrysler New Chrysler

"...on as that happened at the dealer, it got a brand new Chrysler Lombok, right? And it gets put in there. Everybod..."

The Chrysler New Yorker is a larger, comfort-focused car. In the podcast, it’s mentioned because something broke or needed service at a dealer and a replacement part was installed. That’s the kind of real-world ownership detail people want to know.

Car

Rolls-Royce Phantom

"...placed the engine. Yeah. And then that engine has phantom, you know, electrical problems because put it in ..."

The Rolls-Royce Phantom is a very expensive luxury car. The podcast mentions that it can have electrical problems connected to the engine area. Electrical issues can be tricky because they involve sensors and control computers.

Term

spark plugs

"So it's like you've taken spark plugs. I took them into my truck at 30,000km and my Spark plugs were covered in. I don't know what to call it."

Spark plugs help the engine “ignite” the fuel. If they look dirty or coated, it can be a clue that something about combustion or fuel quality isn’t right.

Term

carbonized coating

"my Spark plugs were covered in. I don't know what to call it. It's like a carbonized coating and you can chip it off."

A carbon coating on a spark plug usually means the engine isn’t burning fuel as cleanly as it should. That can be caused by fuel quality or other combustion issues.

Term

white-tailed deer

"Because I know I've heard lots of people like on my friend that was from Nova Scotia, he said out that way. And you know, like we, we joke down here. There's a lot of white tailed deer, right? And you hit a deer?"

White-tailed deer are animals that often wander onto roads. They’re a common reason for car crashes, especially in rural areas.

Term

diagnostic (diag)

"...I had one last week where I almost got the diag wrong... because it's like the same thing. You always got all these other jobs that got to get done, and then you got this diag that you got to do..."

In car repair, “diag” means figuring out what’s actually causing the problem. If you rush it, you might replace the wrong part and have to do the job again.

Term

crank sensor

"...I put a crank sensor in it because... it was a 50 part and it's, it's easier to swap that out than to actually, you know, grab a lab scope..."

The crank sensor tells the car’s computer where the engine is in its cycle. If it’s wrong, the car can run poorly or not start, but replacing it without testing can waste labor.

Term

lab scope

"...it's easier to swap that out than to actually, you know, grab a lab scope and access it and take the connector apart..."

A lab scope is a tool that lets you see what a sensor signal looks like on a screen. It helps confirm whether the sensor is actually behaving correctly.

Term

spark output

"...for me it ended up being, for me it was just I wasn't testing spark output the way I should have been. I was testing it lazy..."

Spark output is how well the ignition system is making the spark that lights the fuel. If you don’t test it correctly, you can chase the wrong problem.

Term

software patch

"...They made a software patch where you don't even need that damn thing anymore."

A software patch is an update to the car’s computer. In this case, it was meant to keep the truck starting properly even if a small sensor-related piece fails.

Term

transfer case

"The last one, four wheel drive, 2500. You know, pull the transfer case with the transmission on the back."

In 4WD vehicles, the transfer case sends power to both the front and rear wheels. Pulling it usually means the job is pretty involved.

Term

ABS module

"...then you got to do all the calibrations on inlet. Note that valves on the ABS module, then you got to do ABS initialization."

The ABS module is the computer that manages anti-lock braking. If it loses its settings, the brakes can behave incorrectly until the system is re-initialized.

Concept

apprentice

"[2765.0s] So, like, I feel like in the trade, like in this industry that, like, it gets missed a lot too. Like, people come in as apprentices and they're not taking in the etiquette properly... [2798.0s] And I was like, it too."

They’re talking about how new trainees sometimes don’t learn the “how we do things here” rules. Those habits matter because they keep the shop safer and less chaotic.

Concept

suspension geometry

"[3262.0s] But yeah, the suspension geometry on those is. But it's fine tuned, perfect."

Suspension geometry is how the suspension parts are set up and angled. It affects how the vehicle handles and how stable it feels when you drive.

Concept

no fuse

"...with alligator clips. No fuse. On it. Just hooked that up and ran it over to the other battery..."

A fuse is safety protection for electrical circuits. If there’s a short and there’s no fuse, the wiring can overheat instead of safely shutting down.

Concept

braking doesn't happen in a vacuum

"...there's so many variables to put in here. Like, braking doesn't happen in a vacuum. Okay. Like, each side is seeing different things."

This emphasizes that brake performance and temperatures depend on many variables: vehicle load, tire grip, road conditions, airflow, brake pad condition, and rotor thickness. It’s a reminder that diagnosing brakes requires more than one measurement.

Concept

infrared gun

"...you'll do brakes on someone's vehicle and then they'll come back with an infrared gun telling you that one side's a little bit hotter than the other..."

An infrared gun measures how hot something is from a distance. But brakes don’t heat evenly in a simple way, so temperature differences can be confusing without the full context.

Concept

supply chain of parts

"...the other thing that just gets me man. Like just the amount of misinformation out there and misunderstanding of how these things work and like the supply chain of parts..."

This is about how hard it is to get replacement parts. If the parts are delayed or backordered, repairs take much longer.

Brand

Tesla

"...all that technology is stolen from or not stolen. Excuse me, that was close. Is. Is borrowed from Tesla. Because Tesla had that."

Tesla is the company they’re comparing to. The idea is that Tesla already had phone/key-style features, and other brands copied the concept.

Concept

EV

"But we evs were heavy. It was heavy EV questions. So when I came through, they were still doing."

EV means electric vehicle. It’s a car that runs on electricity instead of gasoline, so fixing it usually requires different tools and training than normal cars.

Term

regenerative braking

"...basic hybrid like, I mean, basic hybrid like no regenerative braking, no nothing, just a basic. Like it's got a battery pack..."

Regenerative braking is when slowing down helps recharge the battery. Instead of wasting all the energy as heat, the car turns some of it back into electricity.

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