What a great example of how important it is to take an organized and methodical approach to diagnostics! The customer likely has no idea how much money they saved bringing it to you!
I just got burned by removing the switch and testing it out of the car. Yep, works. Put it back in, nope it doesn't work. Went down got a new switch, yep, it triggers much earlier, bought it. Install, and doesn't work. the plate it presses against was the problem. $13 shot to h*ll. That will teach me to remove the seat so I can get up inside the dash with my eyes. LOL At least the dealer felt bad for me, and gave me the $1 pad for free.
I don't think many people realise the honesty and integrity we see with SMA's videos. I've always loved these essential "rare" qualities in the modern human. Eric and Mrs O, beautiful people
@@andrewfidel2220 I had one of those electric lawnmowers and the battery doesn't last long if you are mowing on anything other than level ground. Also, unless you mow often it won't hardly go through tall grass.
@@andrewfidel2220 A few vids back Eric said he had bought himself a battery powered mower, but still pulled out the gas mower every once in a while. I guess every once in a while translates to as often as Eric is shooting a video.
almost every time you start out a video, I swear I hear: "Welcome back to The Self Made Auto Channel." Kinda seems to fit, doesn't it? You didn't get here by dumb luck, gubmint handouts or someone else's hard work. Got lots of admiration for you, sir
One thing I always appreciate is that both Eric and Ivan tell us "powers and grounds", and both of them always insist on using a known good ground, and likewise a known good power, not trusting the wiring harness until it's been tested. This one is proof positive of that logic and is beyond value as shown.
@@elcomandante9299 If the battery has zero charge, you're perfectly set up to measure resistance from the negative battery terminal to whatever suspected bad ground you're looking at.
That's the problem today. Nobody goes the extra mile. Remaking those grounds just saved that customer from another headache in three months. You're my hero, E.O.!!!
Thank you Eric and Ivan for showing me the importance of both good Power and Ground, I recently fixed my Grandsons motor bike, starter dead, had been taken to two local so called professional motor bike repair shops failed to fix it, just wanted to throw parts at it a lot of money he couldn't afford, checked power from the starter button, good checked ground nothing, put in a new ground from the bike frame and off it went, as Ivan would say No Parts Required!! Thanks to you both I was able to diagnose and fix the problem quickly, and the smile on my Grandsons face when he was told his bike was fixed was just priceless....
Well i am here for Eric but Mrs. O is a nice distraction. I'll give you that. I'm a dog person, no cats for me. Besides i am highly allergic to some cats.
I don’t think I have ever watched a video of yours and not learned something. Your thought process and diagnostic process is second to none. Your golden rule is always the same test and verify. Thanks for all you take the time to show us.
I was an hvac technician for 25 years and I trained many new techs right out of school. They never learned dionostic procedure in school, just what things were and basically how they work. I love your videos, you are an amazing tech and teacher.
parts changers.... same with all fields( and college!), everyone wants a quick study and jump out making big bucks $$. it's all coming into a focal point now.
My life doesn't require me to have your kind of knowledge of auto repair, but there is a little part of me that wishes I had at least half of your skills. I really enjoy watching your process and seeing how you solve a potentially complex problem. Processes that could be applied to many parts of life, really. Thanks for sharing!
@7:08 when he said "I'm not the best teacher" i had to chuckle. I'm in my 3rd. Year of auto tech school, and i can say without a doubt, i have learned more watching SMA videos than what I've learned in classroom. Give yourself some credit Mr.O
This is not the only example of proving voltage drop you have shown us on many issues and has taught me a valuable lesson on how to track down or eliminate issues before firing the cannon.
I sometimes watch another channel of someone who says he a car "doctor". When a problem comes in that requires an electrical diagnosis he claims he doesn't have time for it. Yet when I watch South Main Auto, Eric takes in these problems and gets down to pinpointing the eletrical issue or diagnosis and makes it look easy. Tells me that "car doctor" is more like a dr's assistant than anything.
A lot of youtubers became mechanics, detailers, car flippers and doctors in the last period... our hero here is probably the only technician that has close to 1 milion subscribers. I noticed that most of the real technicians don't even get close to 100k. Which is great for me...less ads during the videos 😂. Anyways...a big thank you Eric! You have captivated me for the last 5 years and tough me trics that would have cost thousands in courses. ❤
You are a great instructor Eric.... You take the time to show the proper steps to solve the problem.... not short cut it like some others out there that think they know how to teach....
I'm an electronics hobbyist. I fix stuff, including my own vehicles. My Dad did national service in the Royal Corps of Signals, as a radio repairer. His advice to me, on fault finding was, 'always check your power supplies first'. It has stood me in good stead many times. 'Power and grounds' baby. (BTW. Thanks for the 'solder' pronounciation. Instead of 'sodder'. LOL)
As an engineer, I can confirm what Eric's saying. ESPECIALLY if you're chasing power problems, always use a known good ground and never assume a provided ground is good.
I've listened to several of the skies youtube videos. He is smart intelligent thorough and an excellent mechanic. You should be a automotive teacher.You are in great demand for your knowledge
I want to thank you Eric for sharing your knowledge with us back yard DIY's. The electric steps on my RV quit working and after thinking I was going to have to spend 300.00 dollars on new parts I climbed under the rig and started fishing and found a ground wire with the green crusty puss. Cut the eyelet off and got to clean wire and made the repair like you showed us. Worked great and no money involved except for the new eyelet and heat shrink. Thanks again Eric!!
Content like this should be a "must watch" for any technician program. God knows there's a lot of hacks on TH-cam; but Eric and a handful of others are the gold standard.
Known good ground and known good power should be compared to the points in question, check them and see if they're what they should be. Assuming they are ok and not checking will go really badly real fast. Good video. Anyone who understands simple circuits can follow you
I think the explanation of the diagnosis is of great value. If you don't understand what it means and don't care to educate yourself, well then, it's your lose. If you do, then it is one more knowledge tip in the toolbox.
So, of all the years I’ve been watching your videos, you are a natural teacher. You are entertaining and engaging and if I can understand what you are laying down, anyone can. It seems to be about 60% of the electrical problems you diag are bad grounds 100% of the time!!!
Not the best teacher my foot. Good teaching starts with intimate knowledge of the subject, passion for the subject and, lastly, good communication. You do not have to be slick and polished; just get the point across. You are far better than many I have seen, and I have seen a lot, not just here on you tube. Well Done.
Fantastic as always, Eric. I still have a mystery bad ground on a friend's 2001 Civic that's causing him problems. Reminded me of that very problem! Thanks as always.
You taught this well. I frequently hear you say something about test but verify. This is a perfect showing as to why. If something doesn't seem right, it probably isn't.
What ever happened to "test driving" a vehicle after a repair? Kudos to you for that, I repaired all of my trucks and cars for almost fifty years and always took them for a test drive, but almost no one does any more, you are a real professional!
very good description of how important it is to sets one potential variable instead of two! i have worked for GM for 35 years and while working on electrical I found this an absolute must!. Well Eric O.
see this is why people come to you to fix their cars because you don't just go by the book. not all codes equal the same fix it method. you are a great teacher we garage techs can learn a lot from your videos. keep up the super awesome videos coming.
Sure wished you were closer!! Beginning to think it’s worth the trip from GA to New York just to get a solution for my Suburban! Keep posting, definitely a rare breed on troubleshooting and honesty!
Very good lesson as always from you Eric. I've been an electronics tech for as long as I can remember, mostly repairing TV & radio sets before they became disposable. What you teach in this video is priceless and applies to most any type of troubleshooting no matter if the item is a car, boat, plane, TV set, radio, computer monitor, spaceship, or coffee pot ;). Bravo!
Brilliant tutorial and diagnosis Eric, if I can understand and I’m far from someone who understands anything auto electrical then you’re a great teacher, top class as ever Eric keep teaching us 😊
As much as I love diag and your videos put a new perspective into the way I work and my diagnostics, I would love to occasionally see some videos of you beating the crap out of rust, dealing with broken studs, sweating, doing some timing chains and belts and all that jazz. :D Of course I am well aware you've done all that and then some, I've seen hundreds of SMA videos
Great grounds and parts cannon lesson here. Sitting over 2000 miles away in Mesa AZ while watching, I had to chuckle over "its a real scorcher here today." You should come out here and see the real definition of "indian Summer' Although, maybe the lack of Krusties in the Southwestern automotive wiring harnesses out here have held you back from a summer visit ! Stay cool in the Empire state !
It's easy to focus on the component at the end of the wire, and forget that the information that comes from a sensor is only as reliable as the wiring and connectors. And if ground is your reference, make sure that reference is good before relying on it to take measurements. This is quality electrickery content Eric, thank you. And you ARE a great teacher 🎉👍
Hold your (parts canon) fire! As Sun Tzu explains in The Art of War, “To subdue the enemy without fighting is the acme of skill.” Well done, Eric. Sun Tzu would approve.
Mr O is a automotive genius 👏 this guy is just unreal. I have been watching your videos for over 8 years now and man have I learned alot from you. Thank you Mr O 🙏
I'm a datacom engineer, different type of cabling and signal, etc (same sh** really, all DC, clock rates and signal thresholds). I guess your just humble, but I've learned a heck of a lot more about automotive electrical logic, by watching you, than I have by speaking to actual automotive electrical engineers at conferences.
This video brings up my situation. I generally do most of my car repairs, at least what I can. I would have plugged my OBDII in and saw the code and loaded the parts cannon. I just don't have the service info and diag tools that you do. Yet you take it in and the tech would probably suggested MAF also. I agree MAF is OEM only. The trouble is parts like that are non-returnable unless defective. You blow the diag, you own the part. Tech at repair shop blows diag, they will bill out new MAF, even though original was working. In my industry, it would be billed out as part of troubleshooting. We only remove parts that we can return or reuse somewhere else. For example we order an $800 controller as that is likely source of trouble, we own it. What is a reasonable service to get wiring diagrams, bulletins, etc?
Eric, spent many years being a NVH Tech for a couple of Ford dealerships before I moved on to other things, and yes, electronics was never my strong point. You have the ability to teach an old dog the understanding that was lacking in his younger career, thank you son.
Ground side often gets overlooked in electrical diagnosis. I think people just assume it’s ok because it “doesn’t carry any power”. Eric O has a bunch of videos that deal with ground issues. Good job.
This kind of problem just doesn't happen, down here in North Carolina much except for when someone unloads one of those rust buckets at the car auctions. Great video on how to be sure before you start throwing parts at it.
Thanks for your videos, there's not a lot of honest repair shops and dealerships. You really make the dishonest repair shops and dealerships look as bad as they really are, if only more people would watch your videos there would be a lot more honest technicians. P.s. I particularly liked the video about the suv that was taken to the dealership and the owner was told they needed a complete wiring harness to the tune of $9000. You traced the problem down to a faulty repair of a wire going to the left tail light. I think a lot of problems with technicians is they are taught to rely on only the the car scanner for diagnostic results and when that doesn't work they just assume the car always needs several new parts to solve the problem when in reality you still have to check voltage, ground and other things such as a visual inspections!
Retired old fart here, your content is spot on and fun to watch. Nothing like the power of a good known grounds, simple thing like a ground on a trailer plug for instance. Caught many a young tech grounding their test lights to the truck frame rather than the light cord itself with a trailer light flicker complaint. Our fleet hauled gas and other known flammable goods, nothing worse than seeing sparks coming from the truck's 5th wheel and the tankers coupling plate all because the light cord and plug were not checked separately.
You are a scholar and a gentleman Eric. Whenever you identify something that could save someone headaches and time you take the time to upload a very useful video. You're a Rockstar!!
Ah yes. Check ground and fluid film after is a motto i've adopted from Eric. A bad ground (rust) was causing my horn relay to blow every couple of months. At first I casually asked some local mechanics what they thought and got blank stares. Then I started tracing wires to find the ground. All I could do at that point was clean and fluid film the grounds for the horn and eliminate that out. Haven't had to change a relay since and that was 8 months ago!!
On track for 1Million subs, congrats in advance! Great channel, very thought provoking.......everything I love about auto repair and I don't have to get my hands dirty! LOL
"I'm not the best teacher," says the natural teacher giving another masterclass in auto repair.
Eric O is the Yoda of auto repair. Learned many lesson have we.
Eric ,your grounded😮😉
This just shows how grounded he is (ta-da-dum)
My thought exactly... and SMA can be trusted IMO.
Humility goes a long way!!
What a great example of how important it is to take an organized and methodical approach to diagnostics! The customer likely has no idea how much money they saved bringing it to you!
...and by fixing the other two grounds he may have saved the customer from issues with other components down the road.
This kinda thing eventually got me put on hind teat.
Yes, Eric demonstrates a classic technique of going from top down, from the general to the specific. It's the only effective approach.
I just got burned by removing the switch and testing it out of the car. Yep, works. Put it back in, nope it doesn't work. Went down got a new switch, yep, it triggers much earlier, bought it.
Install, and doesn't work. the plate it presses against was the problem. $13 shot to h*ll. That will teach me to remove the seat so I can get up inside the dash with my eyes. LOL
At least the dealer felt bad for me, and gave me the $1 pad for free.
I don't think many people realise the honesty and integrity we see with SMA's videos. I've always loved these essential "rare" qualities in the modern human. Eric and Mrs O, beautiful people
His mama raised him right 👍
It wouldn’t be a complete experience without the Lawnmower Man in the background doing his daily routine
What will we do when lawnmower man finally discovers electric tools =)
@@andrewfidel2220 You mean when the government FORCES us to buy electric.
@@andrewfidel2220 I had one of those electric lawnmowers and the battery doesn't last long if you are mowing on anything other than level ground. Also, unless you mow often it won't hardly go through tall grass.
@@lvsqcsl sorry you bought a crappy electric mower, modern ones are fine and will do the same job as an equivalent gas mower.
@@andrewfidel2220 A few vids back Eric said he had bought himself a battery powered mower, but still pulled out the gas mower every once in a while. I guess every once in a while translates to as often as Eric is shooting a video.
For someone who won't admit to being an electronics 'techie', your knowledge of how things work suggests otherwise. Good job !
Eric: "I am not an electronics guy."
Also Eric: Has a pocket oscilloscope.
almost every time you start out a video, I swear I hear: "Welcome back to The Self Made Auto Channel." Kinda seems to fit, doesn't it? You didn't get here by dumb luck, gubmint handouts or someone else's hard work. Got lots of admiration for you, sir
One thing I always appreciate is that both Eric and Ivan tell us "powers and grounds", and both of them always insist on using a known good ground, and likewise a known good power, not trusting the wiring harness until it's been tested. This one is proof positive of that logic and is beyond value as shown.
A soon as I saw the MAF harness used a chassis ground I figured that was going to be the issue.
Known good ground? From which location?
@@elcomandante9299 The battery negative terminal.
@@ischmidt Negative Ghost Rider. What if the battery has zero charge?
@@elcomandante9299 If the battery has zero charge, you're perfectly set up to measure resistance from the negative battery terminal to whatever suspected bad ground you're looking at.
That's the problem today. Nobody goes the extra mile. Remaking those grounds just saved that customer from another headache in three months. You're my hero, E.O.!!!
Thank you Eric and Ivan for showing me the importance of both good Power and Ground, I recently fixed my Grandsons motor bike, starter dead, had been taken to two local so called professional motor bike repair shops failed to fix it, just wanted to throw parts at it a lot of money he couldn't afford, checked power from the starter button, good checked ground nothing, put in a new ground from the bike frame and off it went, as Ivan would say No Parts Required!! Thanks to you both I was able to diagnose and fix the problem quickly, and the smile on my Grandsons face when he was told his bike was fixed was just priceless....
Yes, you are the best teacher. That’s why we are here. Well really Mrs. O is the reason we are here. But the teaching is good too.
Here for Luna
Well i am here for Eric but Mrs. O is a nice distraction. I'll give you that. I'm a dog person, no cats for me. Besides i am highly allergic to some cats.
I don’t think I have ever watched a video of yours and not learned something. Your thought process and diagnostic process is second to none. Your golden rule is always the same test and verify. Thanks for all you take the time to show us.
agreed! I came to learn how to fix cars, and last year I learned how to smoke ribs, chickens and mac N Cheese!!!
I was an hvac technician for 25 years and I trained many new techs right out of school. They never learned dionostic procedure in school, just what things were and basically how they work. I love your videos, you are an amazing tech and teacher.
parts changers.... same with all fields( and college!), everyone wants a quick study and jump out making big bucks $$. it's all coming into a focal point now.
When testing properly makes for a simple repair, instead of blindly throwing parts at it. Great job, Eric.
You're a real soldier doing all that soldering.
Finally, someone pronouncing solder correctly.
hard to find good advanced diagnostic mechanics plenty of parts replacers at goodyear
My life doesn't require me to have your kind of knowledge of auto repair, but there is a little part of me that wishes I had at least half of your skills. I really enjoy watching your process and seeing how you solve a potentially complex problem. Processes that could be applied to many parts of life, really. Thanks for sharing!
@7:08 when he said "I'm not the best teacher" i had to chuckle. I'm in my 3rd. Year of auto tech school, and i can say without a doubt, i have learned more watching SMA videos than what I've learned in classroom. Give yourself some credit Mr.O
This is not the only example of proving voltage drop you have shown us on many issues and has taught me a valuable lesson on how to track down or eliminate issues before firing the cannon.
Thank you Eric O for not one, not two, three new educational videos! You spoil us lol!
Awesome advice. I have been a mechanic for 40 years but I learn something from every video.
I sometimes watch another channel of someone who says he a car "doctor". When a problem comes in that requires an electrical diagnosis he claims he doesn't have time for it. Yet when I watch South Main Auto, Eric takes in these problems and gets down to pinpointing the eletrical issue or diagnosis and makes it look easy. Tells me that "car doctor" is more like a dr's assistant than anything.
If a shop can not fix basic electrical problems on cars they should close up shop. Cars have had fuel injection and "electronics" for over 35 years
@@SouthMainAuto Other shops and mechanics! HMPH! We don't wanna mess with electrons; we got brake jobs to do!
A lot of youtubers became mechanics, detailers, car flippers and doctors in the last period... our hero here is probably the only technician that has close to 1 milion subscribers. I noticed that most of the real technicians don't even get close to 100k. Which is great for me...less ads during the videos 😂. Anyways...a big thank you Eric! You have captivated me for the last 5 years and tough me trics that would have cost thousands in courses. ❤
"Doctor I have this cough I can't seem to get rid of, is there anything you can do?" *Doctor* "You're gonna need a double lung transplant."
Any good automotive repair course can teach the basics of electrical testing.
You are a great instructor Eric.... You take the time to show the proper steps to solve the problem.... not short cut it like some others out there that think they know how to teach....
Meanwhile the clock is runnin n the customer pays for a six hour diagnostic charge when it only took less than 1 hour.
I'm an electronics hobbyist. I fix stuff, including my own vehicles. My Dad did national service in the Royal Corps of Signals, as a radio repairer. His advice to me, on fault finding was, 'always check your power supplies first'. It has stood me in good stead many times. 'Power and grounds' baby. (BTW. Thanks for the 'solder' pronounciation. Instead of 'sodder'. LOL)
'Soldered' !! With an 'L'! I'm impressed - that's how we say it in Australia!
ScannerDanner would get a huge grin on his face watching this. You even used his favorite saying, “Test, Don’t Guess “.
Your videos keep me grounded.
As an engineer, I can confirm what Eric's saying. ESPECIALLY if you're chasing power problems, always use a known good ground and never assume a provided ground is good.
That is a great point about not using the signal ground as the ground. Thanks for making this video for us.
I understand almost nothing, but it’s still amazing to watch a highly skilled mechanic such as yourself work.
Ahh typical ground having voltage higher then 0 simple broken and Corroded ground nice quick video Eric O 4:16 @South Main Auto Repair LLC
I've listened to several of the skies youtube videos. He is smart intelligent thorough and an excellent mechanic. You should be a automotive teacher.You are in great demand for your knowledge
Always a master class in common sense and applying logic instead following the 1st 5 results of google.
Well as I say some people can't work there way out of a wet paper bag. Eric O isn't one of them.
I want to thank you Eric for sharing your knowledge with us back yard DIY's. The electric steps on my RV quit working and after thinking I was going to have to spend 300.00 dollars on new parts I climbed under the rig and started fishing and found a ground wire with the green crusty puss. Cut the eyelet off and got to clean wire and made the repair like you showed us. Worked great and no money involved except for the new eyelet and heat shrink. Thanks again Eric!!
When you said, “Soldered” with the L, I cried a little bit. Tears of great joy. Thankyou. Finding the fault on this car wasn’t the only Easter egg.
Content like this should be a "must watch" for any technician program.
God knows there's a lot of hacks on TH-cam; but Eric and a handful of others are
the gold standard.
Known good ground and known good power should be compared to the points in question, check them and see if they're what they should be. Assuming they are ok and not checking will go really badly real fast. Good video. Anyone who understands simple circuits can follow you
Your customers are so lucky to have you!!
I think the explanation of the diagnosis is of great value. If you don't understand what it means and don't care to educate yourself, well then, it's your lose. If you do, then it is one more knowledge tip in the toolbox.
So, of all the years I’ve been watching your videos, you are a natural teacher. You are entertaining and engaging and if I can understand what you are laying down, anyone can. It seems to be about 60% of the electrical problems you diag are bad grounds 100% of the time!!!
I've learned SO MUCH watching this channel.
Thanks for sharing, Mr. O.!
Not the best teacher my foot. Good teaching starts with intimate knowledge of the subject, passion for the subject and, lastly, good communication. You do not have to be slick and polished; just get the point across. You are far better than many I have seen, and I have seen a lot, not just here on you tube. Well Done.
Good Job Eric! I am a teacher - If i can do it - you can do it!
Fantastic as always, Eric. I still have a mystery bad ground on a friend's 2001 Civic that's causing him problems. Reminded me of that very problem! Thanks as always.
As a retired mechanic, I love these videos
You taught this well. I frequently hear you say something about test but verify. This is a perfect showing as to why. If something doesn't seem right, it probably isn't.
Lawnmower man loves you!
What ever happened to "test driving" a vehicle after a repair? Kudos to you for that, I repaired all of my trucks and cars for almost fifty years and always took them for a test drive, but almost no one does any more, you are a real professional!
very good description of how important it is to sets one potential variable instead of two! i have worked for GM for 35 years and while working on electrical I found this an absolute must!. Well Eric O.
see this is why people come to you to fix their cars because you don't just go by the book. not all codes equal the same fix it method. you are a great teacher we garage techs can learn a lot from your videos. keep up the super awesome videos coming.
At last, an American who knows how to pronounce "solder" ! Good job, as usual.
Sure wished you were closer!! Beginning to think it’s worth the trip from GA to New York just to get a solution for my Suburban! Keep posting, definitely a rare breed on troubleshooting and honesty!
Very good lesson as always from you Eric. I've been an electronics tech for as long as I can remember, mostly repairing TV & radio sets before they became disposable. What you teach in this video is priceless and applies to most any type of troubleshooting no matter if the item is a car, boat, plane, TV set, radio, computer monitor, spaceship, or coffee pot ;). Bravo!
Up here in the northern climes, poor grounds and green crusties are a constant companion! Great demo and repair.
Brilliant tutorial and diagnosis Eric, if I can understand and I’m far from someone who understands anything auto electrical then you’re a great teacher, top class as ever Eric keep teaching us 😊
You’re the best car mechanic that I know, awesome job
You are a great teacher! thanks for being humble! also great at diagnosing problems!
As much as I love diag and your videos put a new perspective into the way I work and my diagnostics, I would love to occasionally see some videos of you beating the crap out of rust, dealing with broken studs, sweating, doing some timing chains and belts and all that jazz. :D Of course I am well aware you've done all that and then some, I've seen hundreds of SMA videos
Great grounds and parts cannon lesson here. Sitting over 2000 miles away in Mesa AZ while watching, I had to chuckle over "its a real scorcher here today." You should come out here and see the real definition of "indian Summer' Although, maybe the lack of Krusties in the Southwestern automotive wiring harnesses out here have held you back from a summer visit ! Stay cool in the Empire state !
Well it's going to be hot and humid day here in San Antonio. Wouldn't mind being in West Texas right now.
@@richardmullins9299 , yes most of Texas east of El Paso is more miserable than here in the summer with the humidity !
It's pissing down here in the UK 😂
I'm in Mesa too, the whole valley is still above 110dF. We usually don't get real heat relief until Halloween.
Scorching Eh! Its 1:30 in the morning, its still 35C /72% humidity and my Aircon has died until Wednesday. Welcome to Spain.
As always, I’m very impressed with your diag skills.
A Gibbs Rule from SMA? OMG, sheer joy!
It's easy to focus on the component at the end of the wire, and forget that the information that comes from a sensor is only as reliable as the wiring and connectors. And if ground is your reference, make sure that reference is good before relying on it to take measurements.
This is quality electrickery content Eric, thank you. And you ARE a great teacher 🎉👍
That’s solder with an L😂 I’m with you on that Eric O. Good stuff.
Great tip on what to do when using your scope & how hooking up your leads is important so you’re not wasting your time going in the wrong direction.
Good work Eric, to actually find the fault has gotta be better than bring backs.
O man delivers again! There's your problem Lady. One of the only classes I would pay attention in. I will be back after I chase the squirrels. 😜
Hold your (parts canon) fire! As Sun Tzu explains in The Art of War, “To subdue the enemy without fighting is the acme of skill.” Well done, Eric. Sun Tzu would approve.
"The Parts Cannon is not your friend." -- Ah Choo
7:09... Don't sell yourself short. You are a great teacher. Those who can't do the job teach it. You good sir teach us by doing the work. Thank you
Educational and informative diagnostic skills as usual! Thanks Mr. O
Another demonstration of getting the data.... and some wisdom regarding the acquisition of said data. Making us all better every time you share!
Mr O is a automotive genius 👏 this guy is just unreal. I have been watching your videos for over 8 years now and man have I learned alot from you. Thank you Mr O 🙏
I'm a datacom engineer, different type of cabling and signal, etc (same sh** really, all DC, clock rates and signal thresholds). I guess your just humble, but I've learned a heck of a lot more about automotive electrical logic, by watching you, than I have by speaking to actual automotive electrical engineers at conferences.
This video brings up my situation. I generally do most of my car repairs, at least what I can. I would have plugged my OBDII in and saw the code and loaded the parts cannon. I just don't have the service info and diag tools that you do. Yet you take it in and the tech would probably suggested MAF also. I agree MAF is OEM only. The trouble is parts like that are non-returnable unless defective. You blow the diag, you own the part. Tech at repair shop blows diag, they will bill out new MAF, even though original was working. In my industry, it would be billed out as part of troubleshooting. We only remove parts that we can return or reuse somewhere else. For example we order an $800 controller as that is likely source of trouble, we own it. What is a reasonable service to get wiring diagrams, bulletins, etc?
Eric, spent many years being a NVH Tech for a couple of Ford dealerships before I moved on to other things, and yes, electronics was never my strong point. You have the ability to teach an old dog the understanding that was lacking in his younger career, thank you son.
You hit another home run with this video. Follow the facts, and take the time to troubleshoot the problem. It will save you dollars and time.
Ground side often gets overlooked in electrical diagnosis. I think people just assume it’s ok because it “doesn’t carry any power”. Eric O has a bunch of videos that deal with ground issues. Good job.
Good job! Clean all three grounds on one service rather than have three visits. In the PRNY you know the other grounds would fail soon.
This kind of problem just doesn't happen, down here in North Carolina much except for when someone unloads one of those rust buckets at the car auctions. Great video on how to be sure before you start throwing parts at it.
Great advice. Especially since so many DIYers are buying scan tools and trying to diagnose and repair their vehicles these days.
Thanks for your videos, there's not a lot of honest repair shops and dealerships. You really make the dishonest repair shops and dealerships look as bad as they really are, if only more people would watch your videos there would be a lot more honest technicians.
P.s. I particularly liked the video about the suv that was taken to the dealership and the owner was told they needed a complete wiring harness to the tune of $9000. You traced the problem down to a faulty repair of a wire going to the left tail light. I think a lot of problems with technicians is they are taught to rely on only the the car scanner for diagnostic results and when that doesn't work they just assume the car always needs several new parts to solve the problem when in reality you still have to check voltage, ground and other things such as a visual inspections!
I've learned so much from this dude i feel like i owe him money
U r the best smart and crazy works u know madness and explain it well great job always appreciate all you videos
this is a perfect example showing the consequences of a bad ground and why you have to look at your powers ang grounds! good show!
Here I was watching the Nissan Rogue window repair and this Buick shows up!
You explained it perfectly for me, voltage drop on sensor ground! Good Video, you probably smelled the green crusty when you opened the hood!
Retired old fart here, your content is spot on and fun to watch. Nothing like the power of a good known grounds, simple thing like a ground on a trailer plug for instance. Caught many a young tech grounding their test lights to the truck frame rather than the light cord itself with a trailer light flicker complaint. Our fleet hauled gas and other known flammable goods, nothing worse than seeing sparks coming from the truck's 5th wheel and the tankers coupling plate all because the light cord and plug were not checked separately.
no worries, there will be plenty of warning lights and distance kept when it's on fire. 😏
I been watching ya for a while, enjoy. your series, I am not complaining just my view, But I believe the saying is "Ya can't Saddle a dead horse!!"
You and Ivan have initiated due diligence in my approach to diagnosis.
Greatly appreciate these videos.
If nobody else can do it any better, that makes you "the best teacher," Eric.
Thanks again for helping me to sharpen my skills in diagnosing electrical issues
You rock. Keep up the great work just wanted to say thank you you’ve helped me more than you know more than once.
Signal ground, just another signal, measure it like the others. Very important information you are passing along!
Ready, Aim, don’t Fire!
@2:50 .... In today's episode of 'lawn mower man' 😂
You are a scholar and a gentleman Eric. Whenever you identify something that could save someone headaches and time you take the time to upload a very useful video. You're a Rockstar!!
Ah yes. Check ground and fluid film after is a motto i've adopted from Eric. A bad ground (rust) was causing my horn relay to blow every couple of months. At first I casually asked some local mechanics what they thought and got blank stares. Then I started tracing wires to find the ground. All I could do at that point was clean and fluid film the grounds for the horn and eliminate that out. Haven't had to change a relay since and that was 8 months ago!!
You are good. Great troubleshooting skills sir.
Great video!! Even on a hot day SMA is still cool!! lol
I didn’t know any better, but thanks to you I now do! Please keep teaching! Newish to scoping.
I must be lucky I scanned a 2000 Buick Park Avenue came up with a bad Mass air replaced it with an aftermarket works great. Must be one in a million.
On track for 1Million subs, congrats in advance! Great channel, very thought provoking.......everything I love about auto repair and I don't have to get my hands dirty! LOL
I knew you would fix the other connector because you can't not fix it, it was right there.😂
I have the same addiction.🤪😂🤣🤙