Omega Owners Forum
Omega Help Area => Omega General Help => Topic started by: mason on 17 April 2008, 16:51:31
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Ayup folks,
I want to buy a Tec2; I need some advice on which one to get and where to get it from?
Under £100 if poss or do I need to spend more?
A link would be useful.
Thanks,
mason.
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a real Tech II is going to cost you 4 figures - second hand.
A cheapie Tech II (an imitation) can be had for your budget from ebay.
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Hi,
There are so many OBD2 scanners about it's a job to know which to choose.
I wanted a stand alone scanner as I don't have a Laptop which some readers need. I took advice on Forum to try and get a scanner that will give live data readings and freeze frame data and supports CAN.
I ended up buying a MaxScan GS500 which does all this and also displays the DTC definitions on screen. £79.49 from ECUFix delivered free in 2 days. Info on www.auteltech.com
Only had to use once up to now, but seems easy to use.
HTH
Roger
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Depends what you want to use it for, and on what cars.
If your car is OBDII complaint (2.6/3.2/2.2) then a generic handheld scanner can read engine only.
If you want to read other onboard systems, or car is non ODBII compliant, then a cheap generic scanner is no good.
A real Tech2 costs around £4.5k, and around £1k per year for the software. Obviously, this gives dealer level capablilities.
Opelscanner costs around £300, and is a bit overpriced imho, but capable. Unable to do ecu programming.
Cheapo Tech2 is around £30 and can read most systems, but little else.
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Depends what you want to use it for, and on what cars.
If your car is OBDII complaint (2.6/3.2/2.2) then a generic handheld scanner can read engine only.
If you want to read other onboard systems, or car is non ODBII compliant, then a cheap generic scanner is no good.
A real Tech2 costs around £4.5k, and around £1k per year for the software. Obviously, this gives dealer level capablilities.
Opelscanner costs around £300, and is a bit overpriced imho, but capable. Unable to do ecu programming.
Cheapo Tech2 is around £30 and can read most systems, but little else.
Opel scanner might be a bit expensive for a home user not for a small workshop getting the odd VX in. Since I bought the new USB CAN version with USB interface which covers 1987 - 2008 [ some modules not covered yet, new models]I have been able to recover some of my outlay, plus points, I can contact the company that make it & software updates have been free.
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I think cheapo Tec2 is the way to go for me, as I just want to read fault codes and not ecu programming.
Many thank,
Mason. [smiley=dankk2.gif]
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Depends what you want to use it for, and on what cars.
If your car is OBDII complaint (2.6/3.2/2.2) then a generic handheld scanner can read engine only.
If you want to read other onboard systems, or car is non ODBII compliant, then a cheap generic scanner is no good.
A real Tech2 costs around £4.5k, and around £1k per year for the software. Obviously, this gives dealer level capablilities.
Opelscanner costs around £300, and is a bit overpriced imho, but capable. Unable to do ecu programming.
Cheapo Tech2 is around £30 and can read most systems, but little else.
Opel scanner might be a bit expensive for a home user not for a small workshop getting the odd VX in. Since I bought the new USB CAN version with USB interface which covers 1987 - 2008 [ some modules not covered yet, new models]I have been able to recover some of my outlay, plus points, I can contact the company that make it & software updates have been free.
I think its not a bad bit of kit. But it is for diy mech, rather than garage (who will need a generic one), and hence way overpriced.
If they got it under £100, they would sell bucketloads....