FREE REPAIR MANUALS & LABOR GUIDES 1982-2013 Vehicles
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Description of On-Board Diagnostics


DESCRIPTION

When troubleshooting OBD II vehicles, the only difference from the usual troubleshooting procedure is that you connect the OBD II scan tool complying with SAE J197B or LEXUS hand-held tester to the vehicle and read off various data output from the vehicle's ECM.





OBD II regulations require that the vehicle's on-board computer lights up the MIL on the instrument panel when the computer detects a malfunction in the computer itself or in drive system components which affect vehicle emissions. In addition to the MIL lighting up when a malfunction is detected, the applicable DTCs prescribed by SAE J2012 are recorded in the ECM memory.
If the malfunction does not reoccur in 3 trips, the MIL goes off but the DTCs remain recorded in the ECM memory.





To check the DTCs, connect the OBD II scan tool or LEXUS hand - held tester to DLC3 on the vehicle. The OBD II scan tool or LEXUS hand-held tester also enables you to erase the DTCs and check freeze frame data and various forms of engine data. (For operating instructions, see the OBD II scan tool's instruction book.)
DTCs include SAE controlled codes and Manufacturer controlled codes.
SAE controlled codes must be set as prescribed by the SAE, while Manufacturer controlled codes can be set freely by the manufacturer within the prescribed limits.
Diagnostic Trouble Code Descriptions

The diagnosis system operates in normal mode during normal vehicle use and also has a check mode for technicians to simulate malfunction symptoms and perform troubleshooting. Most DTCs use 2 trip detection logic (*) to prevent erroneous detection. By switching the ECM to check mode when troubleshooting, the technician can cause the MIL to light up for a malfunction that is only detected once or momentarily. (LEXUS hand-held tester)
*2 trip detection logic:
When a logic malfunction is first detected, the malfunction is temporarily stored in the ECM memory. If the same malfunction is detected again during the second test drive, this second detection causes the MIL to light up.