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Re: 2005 toyota tacoma

To: "John T. Blair" <jblair1948@cox.net>
Subject: Re: 2005 toyota tacoma
From: Trevor Boicey <tboicey@brit.ca>
Date: Sun, 13 Feb 2005 17:56:32 -0500
John T. Blair wrote:
> There may be another way.  AutoZone has just started selling a nice little
> tool called the "CarChip" for $100.  It plugs into the diagnostic connector,
> and will record your error codes, and some driving parameters like speed and
> braking.  It also will record your error codes.  After driving with the
> carchip plugged in, you remove it and connect it to your computer.  Then
> you can display various info.  There is a "reset" function available then
> through the your computer to tell the "carchip" to reset the car's computer.

   I've had one of these for a while. They work fine. I've used it for 
the usual ODBC code stuff, "which oxygen sensor needs replacement", that 
kind of thing.

   At $100 I think it's a useful product. I guess on some levels I would 
prefer a standalone unit though, but they cost more and deliver quite a 
bit less.

   The computer hookup gives a LOT more infomation than just the code, 
but it's kind of a pain to run inside and connect to a computer than 
just to read it sitting in the driver's seat.

   (since it requires a serial port, I can't sit in the car with my 
newish laptop and work... laptops haven't generally had serial ports for 
years)

   I guess I'm also concerned about longevity, because right now the 
unit requires a serial port and a computer running windows that runs the 
software that comes with it.

   In five years, most desktop computers probably won't have serial 
ports. And in ten years, it might be hard to find enough junk to put 
together a computer that runs windows and the windows-based software 
that came with the unit.

   If you had a handheld, it would work probably forever. Like when you 
have 1950s era test equipment and special service tools to work on their 
1950s cars.

   I've ran into this in other fields too. I used to do a lot of data 
collection with PC based ISA cards that came with DOS software. At the 
time, they were aimed to be "cheap replacements" for expensive lab units.

   However, the lab units still work, but if you want to use the cards 
you have to find a mid-1990s computer and a mid-1990s version of DOS to 
run them. The cards don't fit in modern machines, and the software won't 
run either.

-- 
Trevor Boicey, P. Eng.
Ottawa, Canada, tboicey@brit.ca
ICQ #17432933 http://www.brit.ca/~tboicey/






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