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Ok. I ponied up the cash and got one.
Right off the bat? I checked the '06 Silverado that had the check engine light on for over 2 years.
Now this truck has had the engine, transmission and computer replaced at a Chevy garage.
Never shut that damned light off! I had a piece of tape over it for years now.
Hooked this Tool up, ran a few diagnostics that all came back good, so erased the stuff in the system.
NO MORE Check Engine light!
So for what I spent on this I'm happy and I'll be doing the Hoe next.
Forgot the actual numbers but it was the Evap system. Will have to drive it and see if they pop up again then recheck.
Thing is I have never seen this truck without the check engine light! Thus the tape.
Forgot the actual numbers but it was the Evap system. Will have to drive it and see if they pop up again then recheck.
Thing is I have never seen this truck without the check engine light! Thus the tape.
I would have to disagree with this scenario in that something like that happening would have to be pretty uncommon, for one it is already fairly uncommon for the average person to ever pop the hood and pressure wash the engine compartment also that the vent line and solenoid are a vacuum system therefore being air-tight and it would make sense that it would also water tight to a certain extent, with the exception if water was aimed just right MAYBE a pretty minute amount could potentially enter the tube, given the solenoid is under the engine cover and under a large portion of the wring harnessVent Solenoid is a very common one. For some weird reason GM ran the vent line up and towards the engine in a position where if an owner sprayed water on the ngine to rinse off after cleaning etc. the vent line would carry water back to the vent solenoid valve and corrode it and of course it would freeze up throwing a code. The solenoid replacement kits have a different vent hose and instructions on how to reroute it to prevent water intrusion. just anotehr reason not to use the engine clean feature at the local car wash.........................
Just a quirky thing that I noticed messing with our company trucks over the last 20 or so years. We had a maintenance guy that liked to pressure wash under the hood LOL. His favorite words of advice "It Ain't Gonna Hurt Nutin"I would have to disagree with this scenario in that something like that happening would have to be pretty uncommon, for one it is already fairly uncommon for the average person to ever pop the hood and pressure wash the engine compartment also that the vent line and solenoid are a vacuum system therefore being air-tight and it would make sense that it would also water tight to a certain extent, with the exception if water was aimed just right MAYBE a pretty minute amount could potentially enter the tube, given the solenoid is under the engine cover and under a large portion of the wring harness
Could have bought a Tech 2 for about the same price!I have this one. Sure wish I knew how to interpret the live data.View attachment 222406 View attachment 222405
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Yeah. I saw that. I may get a Blue Tooth adapter then install Torque on a Note Pad I have.Could have bought a Tech 2 for about the same price!
Yeah, I realized it later on. Thx for reminding meCould have bought a Tech 2 for about the same price!
Yeah, I realized it later on. Thx for reminding melol.
Yeah, I realized it later on. Thx for reminding melol.
I'm in the same boat. I have one that does pretty much everything a one-way tool can do. But, it's relatively minimal once you realize that for another $50-$100, you could've had your entire GM OBD2 world in your hands.