Okay. You went to your local Statesboro car wash and while your pickup was under the dryer, the check engine light started flashing. Panic! What did you just do? Something is seriously wrong with the pickup! You head for the nearest Statesboro service station, but on the way, the check engine light stops flashing, and just glows red. Hmm. Maybe things arenβt as bad as they seem. You decide to wait until payday to take your pickup in to get serviced. In the meantime, the check engine light goes off. What? You decide the light must be faulty, or that when it comes on it doesnβt mean anything, or that itβs just in your pickup as some sort of scam to get you to pay for unnecessary expensive repairs. Youβre glad you didnβt take your car to the Statesboro repair shop and resolve to ignore that engine light in the future.
Whoa! Letβs look at what really happened. Your pickup was under an air dryer. Your air intake sensor measured too much air running through the engine. It sent its report to the engine computer, where a warning was triggered: there shouldnβt be that much airflow when the pickup engine is idling. This is a serious problem that could cause permanent engine damage. Warning! The check engine light starts flashing, letting you know you need to take immediate action to prevent that damage.
You drive out from under the dryer, and the air intake sensor sends a new message to the computer. The computer realizes that everything is normal and tells the check engine light to stop flashing. The pickup doesnβt need immediate attention; but there was a problem, and it should be checked out by your service specialist. After a few days the computer senses that the problem is gone, so it turns off the warning light.
You may think this story illustrates the uselessness of a check engine light, but you should remember that a computer canβt think for itself, it can only follow its programming. It doesnβt know the difference between a car wash air dryer and a serious malfunction in your pickup engine. That doesnβt make it useless. It just means you have to be the smart one.
Being smart doesnβt mean ignoring your pickup check engine light. It lets you know when something is wrong, and you can prevent a lot of damage to your vehicle by paying proper attention to it.
Your engine computer is constantly collecting data about what is going on inside your pickup engine. It knows what parameters are normal, and when a reading may indicate a problem. It uses the check engine light to let you know when something isnβt right. It then stores a code in its memory that a service professional can retrieve that indicates which reading was abnormal.
The service advisor uses this code as a starting place to find out whatβs wrong with your pickup. Itβs like going to the doctor with a fever. The fever is the reading that is abnormal β your temperature is too high β but the doctor still has to figure out whatβs causing it. Itβs probably an infection, but what kind? Sinus infection? Appendicitis? Flu? The problems and their solutions are quite different. But a fever also tells a doctor whatβs NOT wrong with you. Fevers donβt accompany stress headaches, ulcers or arthritis, so thereβs no sense in testing for those conditions.
Your Statesboro service professional responds to a trouble code in your pickupβs computer in the same way. The code doesnβt say exactly whatβs wrong, but it does give the technician a good indication of where to start looking βand where he/she doesnβt need to look.
Now, you wouldnβt consider diagnosing yourself with a serious medical problem; good medical advice β unless youβre a doctor. So you shouldnβt consider trying to diagnose your vehicleβs troubles by yourself; good auto advice β unless youβre a trained mechanic.
There are cheap scanners available on the market and some Statesboro auto parts stores offer to read trouble codes from your pickup engine computer for you, but these are really not good alternatives to taking your vehicle to a qualified service center such as D & R Car Care in Statesboro. Your engineβs computer has both short-term and long-term memory, and there are some codes that are specific to a particular make of vehicle. Cheap scanners canβt read an engine computerβs long-term memory nor can they interpret manufacturer – specific codes. Thatβs why manager Ray Driggers at D & R Car Care spends a lot of money on high-end diagnostic tools.
Itβs as if you had a choice between a doctor who had a tongue depressor and a thermometer and one who had all the latest medical diagnostic equipment on hand. Honestly, which would you choose?
Getting your codes read at your Brooklet auto parts store isnβt really a money-saver, either, unless youβre a trained mechanic. Youβll end up with a code that tells you a symptom. What usually happens next is that the Brooklet parts store sells you something that directly relates to the symptom. It may or may not fix the problem. Itβs actually cheaper to just go to the D & R Car Care in Statesboro and get things fixed right the first time.
Remember, a fever can indicate a sinus infection or appendicitis. An antibiotic may be okay for that sinus infection, but it wonβt help your appendicitis. Is it really wise to wait around to see if the antibiotic helps when you might have appendicitis?
Part of good car care is knowing where you can get a problem fixed, and fixed right. Preventive maintenance goes a long way to keeping you out of the repair shop, but eventually, we will all have a problem that needs fixing. Letβs do it right the first time at D & R Car Care. In the long run, itβs actually the less expensive choice.