Moderator: 3ne2nr Mods
Our code readers work on 1996 and newer OBD2 vehicles sold in the US and Canada. Vehicles sold in other countries, although similar, are not set up the same as the ones sold in the US, and our readers may not be able to link. There are times when our readers will link to vehicles sold outside the US, but “there are no guarantees as these vehicles were not regulated until 2001”. You can verify if the vehicle is OBD2 compliant by looking at the emission label. This label would be located under the hood, normally in front of the radiator. If the label states OBD2 compliant our readers will be able to connect to the vehicles on board computer.
I hope this has answered your question. If you have any other questions please do not hesitate to reply to this e-mail or call one of our ASE Certified Staff Members at 1-800-544-4124. We are available Monday through Saturday 6am - 6pm Pacific Time.
Technical Support
Not linking to my car (Singapore) and my neighbour's Nissan AD Wagon (Japan). But it is linking to my neighbour's dad's 2001 Toyota Corolla (Not sure if Singapore or Japan). They all have the OBDII port of course. Is there anything I can do/try? Software upgrade, etc? *Brackets indicate country of manufacture
Hook wrote:If you're car-savvy and can read the manual and follow it, then yes, it CAN benefit you.
I personally know a owner (will get details of what device he has later this week) who was plagued by a misfire, a rich condition and an intermittent CEL in a Forrester shortly after purchase. He took it to a supposedly reputable garage (where the previous owner used to take it) and was told it was both oxygen sensors giving the fault. They said they'd source the parts and replace them and give him a complete cost, the ballpark figure, as requested by the customer, was $4000.
But he'd already had a code scanner on order that was to come in, so he waited until it got here before he decided.
HIS scan actually indicated s fault in the ignition system, which could either be coil packs or badly worn spark plugs (absolutely nothing was wrong with his oxygen sensors). Four spark plugs later, problem was solved. He saw the benefits of it right out of the box.
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