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OBD, life goes on...

LordPsychon

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 25, 2015
Messages
514
Location
In your basement...seriously, go look now!
Since I've grown tired of not knowing what's wrong with my car and having to rely on others to get it fixed, I've decided I'd like to have an OBD II scanner so at least I know what is wrong. I wouldn't need anything too fancy (no $1000 scanners for me!) but not too simple (one that just tells me the code, no options to reset lights and such). Any idea where to start looking?
 
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hangfirew8

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 14, 2008
Messages
879
Location
Central Maryland
One possibility that has worked well for me is the BAFX ELM327 and Torque Pro, less than $25 invested, and TP gets constant updates.
 
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TangoFoxTrot

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 23, 2009
Messages
1,961
The best "bang for the buck" I've seen are ones where you buy an OBD attachment that attaches to the car port and communicates to a smart phone with a cord (or through bluetooth) where you can then use an app. Something like is like $20-$30 on Amazon or Ebay and it can give you a lot more information than just trouble codes.

I also have a simple OBD II reader that's just an LCD screen that allows you to read the codes and then reset the Check Engine light on many models. Those around the same price, around $20-$30.

I believe all OBD II readers allow you to reset the check engine light, at least all the ones I've seen.
 

JonnyMac

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 15, 2012
Messages
845
Location
Victoria, Australia
Abs and srs systems are not strictly an obd function as they are not related to emissions failures. If you want those function's you have to make sure that there is an actual reference to them in the product description.
 

03protege

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 13, 2012
Messages
3,104
Location
Louisiana
The bluetooth ones I have looked at seem better than the $120 crafstman one I bought. You can just leave it plugged into your DD and pull realtime data anytime you feel like it.
 

VoodooCLD

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 12, 2014
Messages
414
I dont think i would leave it plugged in. The one i have doesn't have an off switch, and it would pull a constant drain on the battery.
 

Bubbles

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 23, 2006
Messages
278
20 bucks talks to your smart phone, torque on your phone, free version
 

Showkey

"MEMBER EMERITUS"
Joined
Aug 9, 2014
Messages
8,638
Location
Wausau WI
Since I've grown tired of not knowing what's wrong with my car and having to rely on others to get it fixed, I've decided I'd like to have an OBD II scanner so at least I know what is wrong. I wouldn't need anything too fancy (no $1000 scanners for me!) but not too simple (one that just tells me the code, no options to reset lights and such). Any idea where to start looking?


Just remember an OBD scanner is NOT a magic wand. Many parts store will scan your car for free..........with the hope that you will buy the parts the scan tool ID as the problem. SCAN TOOLS sell parts.......lots of parts......lots of expensive non returnable parts.

There severel levels of testers or scan tools. The higher level tools give live data stream of the all the sensors and engine running values. This data is often need to correctly ID the componets or systems with the actual problem. The skills needed to read and understand the data stream are very high level.

Well...........the scan tool displays the code. The code maybe a direct indicator of the part needed or the code may only indicated the area of problem. The later indicator is where the skills and knowledge of the user plays and huge part.

Example:
Misfire and fuel trim codes are very common........they can be complex issues but parts stores will gladly sell a boat load of parts in hope that their guess will fix the issue.......either way they make money.

Misfires often get plugs, wires, cap, coils, CDI units, sensors etc etc
Fuel trim often get injectors, O2 sensor, fuel pump, fuel filter, ECU, air filter, vacuumed lines, fuel pressure regulators, any one of ten sensors. Usually it only one part or issue BUT knowing which part and why is where the skills and knowledge is critical.

There are many codes that very specific and ID a specific sensor like temp sensors, throttle position etc..........often codes are also triggered because of wiring and connector issues.

A shop manual can be your best friend.
 
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rubicon01

Active member
Joined
Mar 20, 2015
Messages
28
I've got 2, bought them as I required them. One is just a plain and simple obd2 reader, it will set the mil/cel and read the codes. (It was my first one) I've used it for 3-4 years and still do. The newer one I just bought was because I need live data, not all readers show it, but it is useful in troubleshooting. It also read abs/srs/trans. It took me longer to figure out what all the live data means, but it sure helps when you have a intermittent issue.
The more options that come with it ie srs,trans,abs, live data, the more it's gonna cost. As well look for an upgradable one so when new formats come out you don't have to buy a new reader.
 

cbogg

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 4, 2013
Messages
93
I have an actron from advance. Cost about 100$ after discounts, reads codes, has definitions, does live data, no srs or abs but if it's those kind of deals I'm probably not going to get into those. Especially airbags. For me it works very well and the first time I didn't have to listen to the parts monkey explain to me what the code meant and try to sell me some neon green spark plug wires (yes that really happened once, and no, 6$ worth of plugs fixed the problem, no wires) made the 100$ I spent seem sooooo worth it.
 
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