To be fair though the available readers cannot read all the codes that the manufactuers/dealers can. They only give you what the OBD requirements are.
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Discuss Mouse been in a wiring loom. in the Auto Electrician Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net
Cheers for the update buddy, appreciate it. Where they think they're skills warrant a ÂŁ100 an hour price tag is beyond me.
Anyway enjoy your holiday.
To be honest with the gear they have they should know in a crack what is not communicating. They are vary secretive about sharing information , unless you know someone.
It is highway robbery.
To be fair though the available readers cannot read all the codes that the manufactuers/dealers can. They only give you what the OBD requirements are.
Something has to pay for the service manager, dealer principal and the evermore fancy showroom refurbs every few years
The guy on the tools will be lucky to get 10% of the hourly charge yet he is the one that has to decipher the fault codes to fix the fault although there is not to many of them that can do it without adopting a replace everything stance
A lot of it is all the gear no idea, I have heard stories of dealers quoting over ÂŁ2000 to change several parts when a second opinion from an independent resulted in one part being changed and a bill of ÂŁ150 and the problem solved
There is plenty of competitively priced third party software and the interfaces available for a lot of vehicles that are as good if not better than what the dealers have. I have a few setups for checking my current and past vehicles, having got the information from the ECU's it is how you interpret it to effect the repair.
Single DTC's are easy to fix the issue comes when you get a list of DTC's and you have to work out the cascade of the faults and which DTC is the root cause the others
To be fair though the available readers cannot read all the codes that the manufactuers/dealers can. They only give you what the OBD requirements are.
Yeah. I want the diagnostic tools. I have diagnostic software galore to interrogate building control systems and to integrate anything to anything through bespoke software drivers. The internet of things doesn't extend to cars yet. People fear cars being hacked. Why tie a car to another system.
In Dubai they supposedly have fire systems linked to both the fire station and then to traffic management smart roads. If a fire is detected the available service sets off and the smart roads clear a lane to the firey building. Getting people to think about the potential of integrating systems and how we can take benefit of one system and utilise it for another is tricky. Not everyone knows the benefit of other systems so at the moment we're just playing with ideas.
Take a look at Gendan in Swansea, their diagnostic kit is pretty good.
Problem with manufacturers kit, is the people on the end of it. A lot of them nowadays just look at the computer & go oh that's what we need to change & when that bit doesn't work they'll change something else.
They don't know how the system works or how to actually pull out an Oscilloscope & Meter to actually diagnose the problem.
That's where a good independent wins, they have to know how things work & how to diagnose problems at grass roots level.
It's the same in bms. Loads of "engineers with laptops" who don't understand the hvac control (engine) and just make matters worse. My only faith is with Audi. Tech I spoke to seemed to know what he was talking about. Hopefully it doesn't end up with a work experience who keeps throwing ecus at it.
and another tech had given it a once over, followed a few of the chewed wires and said this rodent damage was superficial and not the cause. From what I can gather he tried to reset a fault with the steering sensor but couldn't do it, figured out the wheel alignment was out and did a 4 wheel track alignment and then recalibrated the sensor to the column and all's well again. I have my wheels back. Cost ÂŁ176 + vat.
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