Handheld OBDII Scanner for your Car P3,500 only!

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ITEM IS IN STOCK and AVAILABLE.
For DIY car enthusiasts and car workshops, an affordable but effective OBDII car scannerfor your ECU equipped cars. It works for OBDII and EOBD compliant cars. These are generally cars from 1996 year model onwards. Exceptions are Asian market Toyota cars which use Toyota's MOBD standard.
This OBDII car scanner can check and reset your diagnostic trouble codes (DTC). An added function not found in other cheap OBDII scanners is the ability to show actual/real time data from your sensors. It can do data streaming of various car sensors and even present them as graphs.
This is also useful to have if you are buying a used car. A lot of the car defects in the electrical and computer system are difficult to detect just from a visual check up and test drive.
Hook up this OBDII scanner and check out the used car before buying.
If you are interested, you can bring your car over and we can do a test before you buy. We hook upthe OBDII scanner on your car and see if this thing can scan your car.
General Information:
1. What does an OBDII socket look like? Ano ba itsura ng OBDII socket sa kotse ko?
The OBDII socket has 16 pins or 16 holes.
2. Where do I find this OBDII socket in my car?
Most OBDII compliant cars have the OBDII socket somewhere in the driver's side of the car. It is usually under the dashboard near the steering wheel. Sometimes it is behind the ashtray on the console or near the fuse box (also on driver's side).
3. What if I cannot find this OBDII socket or if the socket I found does not have 16 pins?
On some Japanese Domestic Model (JDM) cars which were converted from RHD to LHD, it is on the passenger side of the dashboard. If what you found is not a 16 pin socket, then most likely your car is not OBDII. It could be OBDI (models before 1996). If the diagnostic connector or Data Link Connector (DLC) of your car is in the engine compartment, it is almost always not OBDII compliant
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