Hedges
I See Electromagnetic Fields!
- Joined
- Mar 28, 2020
- Messages
- 22,551
I just heard from Scotty- the car guy, that removing the negative cable on modern cars can screw up your computer chips. This works on older cars though. I think they make it so complex so you have to take it to a mechanic! ?
That generally gives the car amnesia. It is a simple way to reset OBD-II error codes. The car also will re-learn fuel and ignition timing and transmission shift points. Radio will forget station presets.
But for some cars, it will also forget who you are, and not open the door to let you in (electronic keyless entry and ignition.)
The electronic diagnosis equipment and smog-check systems require expensive updates every year for the latest models. This wasn't to help the mechanic, it was to make money for the vendor. Of course, the automakers primarily care about reducing manufacturing costs and complying with regulatory requirements so they're allowed to sell cars. Efficiency and pollution rules drive more sophisticated controls. But I do like how clean our air is, compared to the 1970's.
I got a $120 code reader from Harbor Freight. It'll tell me "cylinder #1 misfiring" or "Catalyst low efficiency" and provides real-time readings and graphs. Quite useful for working on my 20 year old cars.
I used to design computers (microprocessor chips inside HP computers, actually.) But I often have difficulty getting anything computerized to work well. Takes the right software to talk to it and debug, and things constantly change. I prefer to use DMM, relays, simple analog circuits. I stick with early models of electronic stuff that don't require a program running on Windows.