[AT] OT Right to repair

Stephen Offiler soffiler at gmail.com
Fri Jan 24 09:12:46 PST 2020


Kind of a wide-open question, isn't it, James?  There are many players in
the scan tool game.  Are you asking if every single one can be trusted?
And what exactly does "OEM Approved" mean?  Does every single OEM even have
a specific process for granting formal approval?

SO

On Fri, Jan 24, 2020 at 11:34 AM James Peck <jamesgpeck at hotmail.com> wrote:

>
> Can you trust the makers of scan tools who say their scan tool is OEM
> approved?
>
> Steve W. AT List Member and Sun machine owner (swilliams268 at frontier.com);
> <snip> It is a much better thing to use a scan tool and figure out what the
> issue is then go from there.
>
> Another thing on any vehicle newer than 2017 is that they now have
> security gateways in most of them which will prevent access with scan tools
> that are not OEM approved. This can make it really hard to access them.
>
> Oh and if you decide to add a programmer or power chip on many of the new
> vehicles, hope you are prepared to give up the warranty and likely end up
> with a dead vehicle as well. The gateway mentioned above can be set up to
> put the engine and transmission into limp mode if it detects tampering with
> the PCM programming. <snip>
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