FuzzyTiger
Well-known member
An opportunity popped up for me to get ahold of a Snap On Verus for a few hundred dollars (~$400CAD). Its not running the latest update and is missing everything but the power cables and is a little rough around the edges but it appears to be in full working condition.
I unfortunately know very little about these devices asides from their reputation as being one of the best tools on the market so I was wondering if someone could answer a few questions for me.
1) I'm a hobbyist, I can justify a few hundred dollars on a decent scan tool but I want to understand the total ownership costs of one of these devices. Is there a subscription service that I need to sign up/pay for? How much do the updates generally cost (ball park figures are fine. 2 digits, 3 digits, 4 digits, more?). Is there 'activations', 'licenses' that I need to be worried about with buying a used device? Will Snap On actually provide any support or tell me to get lost because I bought used?
2) How do the updates work? If it has the update from 2015 lets say (I don't know the exact update version it has just yet so it could be newer or older), does that mean it effectively covers all ODB2 vehicles prior to 2015? If the range covers the vehicles that matter to me, do I HAVE to update or can I just continue to use it indefinitely on the older version? What happens if I hook it up to a newer vehicle than what the update covers? Will it still work, but just be missing some of the more advanced bidirectional features? Would I still be able to read/clear codes, and pull data? Is there a certain point where Snap-On says that this hardware is no longer eligible for further upgrades or could I reasonably expect my hardware to be supported well into the future?
3) I primarily work with European cars (Porsche primarily but sometimes a BMW), and occasionally Asian cars. How is the coverage for them? I noticed on the Snap-On website, european cars are listed as an "optional" feature? How do I check if a Verus has that feature, and if it doesn't, is it something that can be purchased separately or will it be one of those situations where when I try to get that, they'll expect me to update to the latest version as well and suddenly I'm looking at a lot of $$$. Or is that feature alone big $$$?
4) Are the missing cables a big deal? I saw on ebay that there seem to be lots of cables listed at pretty reasonable prices. Anything special I need to be concerned about? I don't mind spending $50 for a cable, but if its going to cost me a few hundred for a cable and each cable is only good for a small range of models so I'll need to be buying a box full of cables.. That very much changes the equation for me.
5) I also saw that there are ODB1 adapters available for these... How is ODB1 support on the Verus? Is it worth looking into or should I just treat the cars as not having any diagnostic port because the lack of standardization makes it a mess to use?
6) What is the user experience like with one of these devices? I currently use a Launch scanner that connects to my cellphone. Its okay but the UI is kind of a mess, half the things barely make any sense and I'm always a bit nervous trying any of the actuation tests or special functions because its about a 50/50 chance that they'll work. It kind of makes it frustrating to use the more advanced features because I never know if there is an actual issue with the car or if its just my tool.
7) Anything else I should know about one of these devices?
I unfortunately know very little about these devices asides from their reputation as being one of the best tools on the market so I was wondering if someone could answer a few questions for me.
1) I'm a hobbyist, I can justify a few hundred dollars on a decent scan tool but I want to understand the total ownership costs of one of these devices. Is there a subscription service that I need to sign up/pay for? How much do the updates generally cost (ball park figures are fine. 2 digits, 3 digits, 4 digits, more?). Is there 'activations', 'licenses' that I need to be worried about with buying a used device? Will Snap On actually provide any support or tell me to get lost because I bought used?
2) How do the updates work? If it has the update from 2015 lets say (I don't know the exact update version it has just yet so it could be newer or older), does that mean it effectively covers all ODB2 vehicles prior to 2015? If the range covers the vehicles that matter to me, do I HAVE to update or can I just continue to use it indefinitely on the older version? What happens if I hook it up to a newer vehicle than what the update covers? Will it still work, but just be missing some of the more advanced bidirectional features? Would I still be able to read/clear codes, and pull data? Is there a certain point where Snap-On says that this hardware is no longer eligible for further upgrades or could I reasonably expect my hardware to be supported well into the future?
3) I primarily work with European cars (Porsche primarily but sometimes a BMW), and occasionally Asian cars. How is the coverage for them? I noticed on the Snap-On website, european cars are listed as an "optional" feature? How do I check if a Verus has that feature, and if it doesn't, is it something that can be purchased separately or will it be one of those situations where when I try to get that, they'll expect me to update to the latest version as well and suddenly I'm looking at a lot of $$$. Or is that feature alone big $$$?
4) Are the missing cables a big deal? I saw on ebay that there seem to be lots of cables listed at pretty reasonable prices. Anything special I need to be concerned about? I don't mind spending $50 for a cable, but if its going to cost me a few hundred for a cable and each cable is only good for a small range of models so I'll need to be buying a box full of cables.. That very much changes the equation for me.
5) I also saw that there are ODB1 adapters available for these... How is ODB1 support on the Verus? Is it worth looking into or should I just treat the cars as not having any diagnostic port because the lack of standardization makes it a mess to use?
6) What is the user experience like with one of these devices? I currently use a Launch scanner that connects to my cellphone. Its okay but the UI is kind of a mess, half the things barely make any sense and I'm always a bit nervous trying any of the actuation tests or special functions because its about a 50/50 chance that they'll work. It kind of makes it frustrating to use the more advanced features because I never know if there is an actual issue with the car or if its just my tool.
7) Anything else I should know about one of these devices?