Posts Tagged board diagnostics

Start Saving on Car Repairs with the blaZt.II OBD II Cable

Using on-board diagnostics through the on-board computer of your car to assess your vehicle’s health has never been easier; with the blaZt.II OBD II Cable and NDSII Software, you can get all the information you need to keep you car running trouble free and smoothly.

The blaZt.II OBD II Cable and NDSII Software are both available now for online purchase through www.blazt.biz. An intuitive product that provides comprehensive information about your car engine computer statistics and engine codes, the NDSII software is the perfect suite for keeping your car performance at its best. The software currently supports only ConsultII and ISO9141 standards, though compatibility with most major standards including CAN and KWP2000 coming soon.

The blaZt.II OBD II Cable on the other hand is the perfect hardware to connect the on-board diagnostics computer of your car with your laptop or computer. It supports almost all known car diagnostics protocols including ISO9141, ConsultII, KWP2000, CAN, VPW, and PWM.

When put together, there is no better system currently available in the market for petrol powered Nissans for the price. With in-built compatibility for Nissans from 2000 onwards, the cable is more or less future proof, which means you just have to buy it once for a lifetime of savings. What’s more, the cable design is such that it will keep giving you year after year of flawless connectivity. Your computer might change, but not your blaZt.II OBD II cable.

At just USD$184, the blaZt.II OBD II cable with NDS II software suite is guaranteed to give you more savings in just a single use than the cost you incur in purchasing it!

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Car Diagnostics: not What it Used to be

When something goes wrong in your car, you have two options: one is to attack the problem yourself; and the other is to have a car diagnostics specialist take a look at it.

As recently as twenty years ago, tackling the problem yourself was a viable option if you knew your way around a car. Unfortunately, the downside to this option was that it took time. More often than not, it was a case of trial and error, checking and re-checking. Then there was the waiting for the replacement parts, followed by their installation.

Nowadays however, most cars have complex electronic control systems installed, sometimes with as many as 10 units in the one car! Checking these complicated systems yourself could prove dangerous or in the case of airbags, even fatal, should you not know exactly what you are doing.

The car diagnostic system is usually situated near the dashboard area or around the central console and is accessed by a port, known as a European On Board Diagnostics or EOBD, port. It is designed to reduce the emissions released into the atmosphere in an attempt to make vehicle fuel consumption more efficient and therefore more economical.

The design of the EOBD means that a car diagnostics technician can plug in specialist equipment to an EOBD port, and locate the problem in a matter of minutes for the majority of problems. Although the EOBD tool does not cover every single car on the market, its model range is fairly impressive covering a wide selection of cars from Europe and Japan. It also covers a few models from America.

For those of you who are unsure what constitutes a Car diagnostic problem, they are listed here and can include the systems of Engine Management, Airbag / SRS, ABS / Traction Control, Air Conditioning, Automatic Transmission, Chassis Network, Diesel Management, Immobiliser, Key encode, and Service Light Resetting. and CANbus Systems.

CANbus is a fairly new system and internationally standardised: ISO 11898. Originally developed by Bosch, it consists of only two cables, making the likelihood of error very remote. In order to read the data, which is transferred at speeds of up to 1MB per second, an adaptor is required. Experienced car diagnostic technicians carry one of these on them. It is not advised for car owners not experienced in car diagnostics to attempt to access this system in any other way.

Even if there is no problem with your car, you might still need the services of a car diagnostic technician if, for example, you want to turn off the airbag facility, due to small babies, elderly or sick people being put at risk by travelling in a seat where a front-facing airbag is active. A car diagnostic technician can help you do this.

In some countries where extreme weather conditions prevail, it is worthwhile having a car diagnostic technician check over your car on a regular basis. In this way you can prevent potentially life-threatening problems from occurring.

Probably the greatest difference between car diagnostics twenty years ago and car diagnostics today is that there are diagnostic technicians who are completely mobile now, saving the consumer, time, money and inconvenience

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