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Monitor your car's performance with the Torque app for Android

Your car's dashboard is probably home to a speedometer, a tachometer, a fuel gauge, and -- if you're lucky -- a coolant temperature gauge. However, your car's electronic brain (ECU) is actively monitoring dozens of parameters behind the scenes that you, the driver, could find useful. This is where diagnostics hardware and apps like Torque Pro and Lite for Android step in, putting all of that data at your fingertips.

Torque doesn't require anything more than the hardware already present on your Android phone to function. Without any external hardware, Torque can still pull sensor data … Read more

CNET Roadside Assistance 028:Where we fix your Droid pairing problems for free. (podcast)

This week, we look at VW integration with a Droid X, figure out how to add iPod integration to a Lexus, and find out what you can plug into your OBD2 port.

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LOLcars (photos)

PLX intros OBD-II dongles for Android, iPhone

PLX Devices (manufacturer of the Kiwi fuel-saving device) has expanded its lineup of OBD-II readers. We've already seen the PLX Kiwi Wi-Fi iPhone adapter at last year's SEMA show; now, it has announced the PLX Kiwi Bluetooth for Android phones.

Both devices work in similar ways: users plug the Kiwi dongle into the vehicle's onboard diagnostics port (all vehicles manufactured after 1996 should have one), and connect their iOS device via Wi-Fi or Android OS phone via Bluetooth pairing. At this point, the PLX device will stream vehicle diagnostics information, emissions info, power train data, and trouble … Read more

A brief intro to OBD-II technology

OBD stands for onboard diagnostics and OBD-II is a collection of connection and protocol standards standards for all cars sold since 1996, when the OBD-II specification was made mandatory by the U.S. government.

OBD technology was born out of the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) and California Air Resources Board's (CARB) mandate that vehicles equipped with more-sophisticated emissions equipment and better diagnostics systems to monitor that equipment. The agencies wanted to ensure that new vehicles were running as cleanly and efficiently as they could. However, purchasing diagnostics equipment for each of the manufacturers' proprietary vehicle information systems would be prohibitive for third-party garages and testing centers. Thus, the OBD standard (and the subsequent OBD-II revision) was born.

The first part of the OBD-II standard is the connector. The 16-pin female interface connector must be located in the vehicle's cabin within 2 feet of the steering wheel. For most cars, this means in the driver's foot well or just below the steering wheel. Although, the physical connection is always the same in OBD-II-compliant vehicles, not all of the 16 pins are always utilized and the data isn't always sent over those pins in exactly the same manner, so there is some variation within the standard. Specifically, there are five major signaling protocols for vehicles sold in the United States between 1996 and 2008 that can usually be discerned by the configuration of pins used. New legislation has narrowed these five variations down to one, ISO 15765 CAN, for all vehicles sold after 2008, so the OBD-II standard is decidedly more standard from that point forward.

Outside of the US OBD-II standard there are also the European EOBD and EOBD2 standards and the Japanese JOBD standards.

What does it do?

Where the real work of the OBD-II standard takes place is within the data sent over the connection. During normal operation, your vehicle is constantly monitoring a little more than 100 standard Parameter ID (PID) codes. Every vehicle must be capable of sending or receiving these codes over its OBD-II connection. These codes tell the tale of the systems monitored by your vehicle's emissions system, everything from fuel system status to engine and vehicle speed to the status of the vehicle's various O2 sensors. If there is an error with any of these parameters or if a value falls outside of a predetermined safe range, the vehicle will illuminate its Check Engine light.

The vehicle's computer is able to send all of this diagnostic information over the OBD-II connection to a connected diagnostic tool via PID along with special PIDs, known as trouble codes, that detail the issue. There are about 900 possible trouble codes in the OBD-II standard reporting on everything from fuel systems to emissions controls to transmission status.This makes it easy for a mechanic or emissions official to quickly diagnose an issue with a vehicle's engine and emissions equipment without hours of guessing and checking.… Read more

Car Tech Live 153: How Toyota will fix its tech nightmare (podcast)

Toyota spends a week in hell, the U.S. tells truckers what not to do in the cab, you don't drive as fast as you think, we take a ride in a Buick that will change your mind about grandpa's brand, and we run down 12 of the hottest tech cars for 2010.

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Hearings? Really? Toyota to be grilled on Capitol Hill over accelerator issue

Truckers & bus drivers banned from texting while driving

2010 Buick LaCrosse impresses us on first blushRead more

EconoDriver, SafeDriver records driving performance from key fob

The EconoDriver and SafeDriver by Lemur are wireless vehicle monitors that record driving performance to a key fob display to help drivers be more efficient and safe.

The key fob displays are battery powered and can be mounted on the dashboard for continuous monitoring of reports. Both units ship with a sensor that plugs into your vehicle's OBD-II port to wirelessly transmit information from your vehicle's sensors to the key fob.

The SafeDriver displays the maximum speed, distance traveled, and sudden braking incidents to help parents keep tabs on new drivers. The device locks with a PIN to … Read more

A closer look at Garmin's ecoRoute HD

When we last heard about Garmin's add-on to make its ecoRoutes software smarter, it was going under the name of ecoRoutes ESP and details were sparse. Now, as we approach CES 2010, Garmin has revealed new details surrounding the device on its corporate blog and a new name, ecoRoute HD. OK, so the name's not that different.

The big news here is the announcement of the expected availability date of March 2010 and the suggested retail price of $149.99.

The ecoRoutes HD system is built around two parts: the wireless OBD-II port dongle, which interfaces with your … Read more

2010 car tech and GPS preview

It used to be that the SEMA Show was the biggest mobile electronics show, but this year the usual suspects in the in-car electronics biz decided to stand back and wait for the new big show: CES 2010.

Now that the wait is almost over, just what should we expect from the world of car technology at CES? Here's our best guess:

You down with OBD?On-board diagnostics connections have been required on vehicles for almost two decades. This mysterious window into your car's brain has been the best kept secret of mechanics and tuners, until now. We'… Read more

Award-winning tech at the 2009 SEMA Show

With the absence of the major car audio OEMs at the 2009 SEMA Show, it would be easy to assume that car tech has taken a backseat to tuning and muscle. However, the more compact electronics section allowed smaller companies with truly innovative products to shine. We found ourselves spending more time learning about cool products like the PowerSafe jumper cable, instead of rushing from booth to booth looking at amplifier after amplifier.

For example, On-Board Diagnostics (OBD-II) interfaces were a major part of the tech scene at SEMA. From add-on modules for your GPS device to standalone OBD-II devices … Read more

Garmin communicates with your car via ESP

We stopped by Garmin's booth at the 2009 SEMA Show expecting a new GPS device or news of another OEM integration deal, but we stumbled upon something even better. Sometime next year, Garmin's Nuvi GPS devices will gain the ability to communicate with your car through ESP. In this case, we're not talking about psychic extra-sensory perception, but the EcoRoutes ESP module for Nuvi navigation devices.

The ESP module is a hideaway box that connects to (and is powered by) your vehicle's OBD-II diagnostics port. The device gathers information about your vehicle's performance and relays … Read more