Well, 108 years later I think it is you have a bean-counter that is out to make the motor company money so he is counting absolutely everything that could possibly be done to your bike under the most pristine conditions; i.e. lab conditions. They build in a safeguard timeframe that includes taking care of your bike from stem to stern and figures tweeking every bolt and nut, lubing every cable, checking the air in the tires, cleaning the oil drain pan before and after your oil goes in, and everything else that could be checked to keep your bike "as new" to return it to you. Then you have the "reality" wrench that may do the bare minimal and gives it a once-over and says, "it's a brand new bike; everything's got to be good, right?" And he (or she) may be working on your bike, as well as the bike beside yours and after a couple "short breaks" it comes out the door on the light side of 3 hours and so of course they get to claim the 3 hours that the book says. Now this could all be conjecture on my part..............But it sounds like there are several methods of charging us and breaking the bill down so it is very difficult to even price shop one dealership versus another.........remember, this has had 108 years of practice to get the methods down. Think they're gonna change the system now just because it "seems" high?? pork