Ewing Automotive offers complete automotive and light truck diagnostics. Today’s vehicles are run by several computers or control modules. To give you an idea of what I am talking about, the engine is managed by an electronic control module, or ECM. These control modules monitor and control the fuel, emissions, temperature, timing of the engine, braking, starting, charging, transmission shifting, and speed.
The electrical accessory systems that add luxuries like power windows, door locks, seats, mirrors, heating, and air conditioning are also run by a control module called a body control module, or "BCM." When one of these systems in your vehicle starts malfunctioning, a driver is alerted by either the illumination of a warning light on your dash or The vehicle could also start malfunctioning by not starting, a rough idle, running poorly, or a loss of power, or the fuel economy level could have changed, or possibly another symptom. In order to properly diagnose what is going on with the vehicle and conclude what the proper repair would be, it takes knowledge, equipment, and time for the automotive technician to run the needed tests.
Unfortunately, when you tap into the vehicle’s ECM, it does not tell you what is wrong. In fact, the ECM makes adjustments and changes to compensate for the symptom that it is seeing, so the vehicle will still operate as close to normal as possible. The diagnostic process starts with retrieving the code or codes from the ECM. These codes give you the circuit or circuits that are affected and the condition that the vehicle’s computer is seeing. From there, a qualified diagnostic technician follows a diagnostic path of pinpoint testing to find the source of the problem and what is causing the condition. As a comparison, a medical doctor has to run tests on patients who are having symptoms to find out what is causing a health symptom or condition. The initial exam and tests have a charge associated with them, whether they are blood tests, biopsies, x-rays, or scans. Much the same, an automotive repair shop too has a charge associated with that testing time and the expertise of the technician that it takes to perform these tests and form a conclusion based on the information gathered from these tests. To be honest, this diagnostic process can be the most complicated part of vehicle repair. The technician who is delegated this task is a specialist in vehicle computer diagnostics.
These technicians constantly continue to further their education, training, and upgrading of their tools and equipment since the systems on vehicles are constantly evolving and changing. The diagnostic equipment used in most repair shops is not a simple hand-held code reader like you find at most auto parts stores. These hand-held scanners will give a general idea of where to look for a problem but do not show how each circuit is functioning. The diagnostic tools we use cost thousands of dollars to buy up front, plus it costs about a thousand dollars a year to keep the diagnostic tool updated with the latest information. The cost associated with owning and operating an automotive repair shop would shock most people. It can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars a year to operate a shop. Shops have most of the same expenses as most households, plus some. We have utility bills and mortgages to pay. Taxes and disposal fees. Plus, we have to pay our technicians. So don’t be surprised when you are quoted a diagnostic fee next time your vehicle acts up or a warning light comes on in your dash. In reality, it is less expensive to pay for a proper diagnosis than it is to replace parts based on what might be failing, what is most commonly replaced, or the hunch factor.