Click to view our Accessibility Statement or contact us with accessibility-related questions
Showing 1 of 137 conversations about:
Evoe
1
Feb 28, 2014
bookmark_border
Cool idea, but this is incredibly overpriced. Bluetooth ODB2 readers cost less than $5 dollars and get you all the raw data to your phone (ton of free apps to read this data - and they get you the error code as well for diagnostic) This means you are basically paying $70 for a software layer that does some small calculations (and I mean small).
Feb 28, 2014
andy
1442
Feb 28, 2014
bookmark_border
Feb 28, 2014
Alawishis
41
Jun 26, 2014
bookmark_border
andyAll of those differences you list are handled by the software. So that establishes Evoe's point of most of what you are paying for is a software layer. Do you have any information on how the hardware is any different than a basic bluetooth ODB2 reader, I mean other than cosmetic.
Jun 26, 2014
View Full Discussion