You are on page 1of 46

Modern

Modern Auto
Auto Mechanics
Mechanics
•Increasingly modern vehicles are a marriage of electronics and mechanical
components.

•Special equipment and skills are needed to keep these vehicles operating
in top shape.

•Like almost any profession continuing education will be necessary to keep


current with new technologies. 
Vehicle Computer
•Modern automobiles may show problems through fault lights that
correspond to fault codes that require electronic equipment to
decipher. 
•Even with the proper test equipment like the Snap-on MODIS
device pictured above the problem can be complicated to diagnose
as one problem can generate multiple codes.  
Newer vehicles have plug for diagnostic devices.
Proper adapter is needed to plug diagnostic device.
•The Snap-on MODIS device can read engine fault codes and many
types of data. It could even be connected to the vehicle when driven
monitoring air, brakes, etc. 
•It is very important that students are comfortable reading graphs
and be able to interpret the data because the scales on the graphs
are ever changing.
• 
Sensors communicate with the vehicle computer.
Quote from article by Dale J. Long website:
http://technologyinterface.nmsu.edu/winter99/manufacturing/long/long.html

Automobile sensors can be classified into 3 basic areas:


1. drive-train and vehicle control,
2. driver safety/comfort/information and
3. emissions.

• They are used to monitor temperature, gases, voltages /


currents, vacuum and torque to name a few.

• Twenty years ago, the typical automobile had approximately five


sensors.

• Today, over fifty sensors are used to control everything from


braking to the fuel delivery system.
The carburetor used on vehicles before fuel injection.
•Computer technology has enabled fuel injection systems to almost
completely replace the carburetor system used for many years before that.

•By processing the data from a variety of sensors, the fuel-air mixture can
be more precisely controlled for a better operating engine. 

•Engines should start better, run smoother, are more fuel efficient and less
polluting.
Fuel injector
•Electronics in newer cars have replaced the mechanicals parts that
wear out in older cars that had points and a distributor.

•Before the new electronic ignition, cars would often require points to
be adjusted or replaced every 10,000 miles or so.  

•Electronic ignition provides more accurate spark timing which


improves the combustion and emissions.
Distributor and coil seen in this picture.
Relay
Points
•Only balancing tires is not enough to ensure that there are not additional
issues with the tires that could be causing steering problems or causing the
car to pull when going driving down the road.

•Newer testing equipment such as the StraightTrak Road Force Measurement


System in the pictures above can check for tire conditions such as
“conicity”. Conicity can be a manufacturing glitch where the tire’s tread has
cured in a slight cone shape.
•The modern method for checking the alignment of an automobile utilizes
electronic camera type sensors and a computer to give readings for such as
camber, toe, and caster.

•Newer equipments sets up quicker which allow the service provider to


charge less yet make more money because of the faster time for the
alignment.
•Auto mechanics students will increasingly need to be able to
work on radically different types of automotive technology now
and in the future.
•The pictures below are of a transaxle from a Toyota Prius hybrid.

•Hybrid cars unite a fuel powered engine and an electric motor to


increase fuel efficiency and reduce emissions.

•This system is rather complex in that various techniques are employed


to increase efficiency such as charging batteries while braking, turning
off the engine while stopped, and assisting the power to the wheels with
electric power.
R U READY??

You might also like