jim_rush51
Well-known member
Mechanic swaps parts, technicians are paid for actual diagnosis. The terms are interchangeable according to who you talk to, but thats how i, and many people i know use them.
Just like MD or Phd?
Different thing entirely.
as i understand it a tech can rebuild systems a mechanic just swaps parts
a mechanic is one who understands the entire mechanical system from concept, to design, prototype, production and maintenance. A mechanic is not a parts changer, but a well-rounded master of machines. In the purest form of the word, engineering is a dicipline of the mechanic, as is machining and the maintenance of machines.
A technician, on the other hand, is the monkey level intelligence putz at Pepboys...
I always thought (automotive industry) that "Mechanics" did an apprenticeship and "Automotive Service Technicians" were the dumb kids that go to school for a few months and get a job screwing up your car at the local(insert repair franchise name here). I'm probably wrong and I don't mean to insult anyone.

Once had a body shop owner ask me if I was ICAR certified, I told him I couldn't paint that badly...Useless letters. It's not like customers ask if i'm qualified! (Not yet, soon.)

Mechanic swaps parts, technicians are paid for actual diagnosis. The terms are interchangeable according to who you talk to, but thats how i, and many people i know use them.
Here's another spin, think of a mechanic as the person who fixed cars before they became computer controlled. A technician repairs modern computer controlled vehicles. A technician today may repair more cars with their laptop computer reprogramming various modules than they do with actual tools. A technician also has to interpret various parameters on a scan tool screen. Something that the mechanics of yesterday didn't have to.![]()
Isn't "Technician" just a fancy new title for a mechanic? Like Domestic Engineer?
Lets look in the dictionary and see what it says about mechanic.
Here's another spin, think of a mechanic as the person who fixed cars before they became computer controlled. A technician repairs modern computer controlled vehicles. A technician today may repair more cars with their laptop computer reprogramming various modules than they do with actual tools. A technician also has to interpret various parameters on a scan tool screen. Something that the mechanics of yesterday didn't have to.![]()

be surprized on the amount of shops down here that won't work on anything pre OBD2
Horse ****.
Already did, way back on page one, but I don't think anybody really read my post other than ZRX.
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Here's another spin, think of a mechanic as the person who fixed cars before they became computer controlled. A technician repairs modern computer controlled vehicles. A technician today may repair more cars with their laptop computer reprogramming various modules than they do with actual tools. A technician also has to interpret various parameters on a scan tool screen. Something that the mechanics of yesterday didn't have to.![]()
mechanic can fix or repair by reading the plugs wear patterns SOUND
technician needs a computer to tell them what is wrong...
be surprized on the amount of shops down here that won't work on anything pre OBD2
excuse they don't have the tools....
Use em all the time to set points gapsBack in the day we had to read a scope, use a dwellmeter, voltmeter, vacuum gauge, etc. We had to set the dwell and timing, and adjust the carburetor. Maybe recurve the distributor, rejet the carburetor.
I see technician as being a combination of mechanic and a little bit of engineer. My job description is Test Technician and I work with construction equipment product engineering and validation. I have to set up test stands, monitoring systems and equipment, etc. Lots of computer work and math whereas with my own vehicles, I'm a mechanic. Diagnostics and parts changing/repairing.