Posted February 14, 200817 yr Mike, I was wondering about the Scangauge. Is it a simple plug and play setup? I am interested in getting on.Al
April 6, 201015 yr i believe that i would like one also:drool:.while we are on this subject..MOPAR...overhead lier..vs..hand calculation..vs..SGII....what are you seeing for the most accrurate.....o.k...throw out the overhead lier...:lmao:how about comparing there other two?i mean..it has...or a person would that it would be a close figure...since it is plugged in...but filling up and documenting and hand calculation....the reason i asked is because i have seen them in many peoples sig.
April 6, 201015 yr Owner i believe that i would like one also:drool:.while we are on this subject..MOPAR...overhead lier..vs..hand calculation..vs..SGII....what are you seeing for the most accrurate.....o.k...throw out the overhead lier...:lmao:how about comparing there other two?i mean..it has...or a person would that it would be a close figure...since it is plugged in...but filling up and documenting and hand calculation....the reason i asked is because i have seen them in many peoples sig. Simple... My SG II and Garmin V are closer to right than hand calculation typically... For the reason my stock speedometer and odometer are off by exact 0.5 MPH so the stock odometer is typically about 20-25 miles faster compared to the Garmin or the ScanGauge II so the MPG numbers are about 0.2 to 0.5 lower on the SG II which is just about dead on if I use the mileage numbers from the SG II / Garmin to hand calculate. But if I use the stock speedometer the numbers are higher and alway have me re-calibration everything till I relized that 0.5 MPH offset is enough to foul all the calculations and remember if you calculating the SGII use the SG II number for figuring NOT the stock odometer! Watch around the 1:09 mark you see my calc for offset appear... This gets worse over time of travel... http-~~-//www.youtube.com/watch?v=pq0XG5qRLsM
April 2, 201114 yr Mike,Your results are almost exactly what I am getting. Just did a trip from Phoenix to the Gilroy CA area, then back down to through the LA area and home again. Just shy of 1500 miles in two days and an average just shy of 23 mpg. Course what kicked my rear were the 45 mph head-winds for the three hours coming South again otherwise would have had closer to 24 mpg.Started out with the ScanGauge 1 years ago and loved it, but now using the ScanGauge 2 and its even easier to work with. As well the "data cord" is a Cat 5 network cord so if needed you can patch in longer extensions to make it work.Joe A
May 7, 201114 yr I have a Scan Guage II, works well, with one exception. If I leave it plugged into the OBDII port, it will work fine for days, then, without notice, it will shut off. will not reconnect right away, but does come back. I sent it back to the manufacturer for testing, they returned it, with not so much as a note, no indication of what they did or did not do. The unit still works the same.reads and clears codes fine, but not much sense using it as a trip meter, or for mileage , as it will fail on me.I just threw it in the tool box, and will buy something else.good luck
May 9, 201114 yr Mine has done that once or twice in the 4+ years I have had it, thou it has had to go back to linear logic twice for other issues. I am happy with it, but haven't used the trip/mpg function since I sold my Toyota as it's not accurate on my Dodge (but am about to order a 2nd cord to keep it in my DD, and will calibrate it for that). For those of you with a SG and an 05+ try these codes (I hear they don't work on 03-04). 05 Cummins Fuel Rail Pressure TXD: 686AF10123 RXF: 044145230000 RXD: 2810 MTH: 001D00C80000 NAM: FRP 06+ Fuel Rail Pressure TXD: 07DF0123 RXF: 044145230000 RXD: 2810 MTH: 001D00C80000 NAM: FRP
May 9, 201114 yr These are looking like they might be a good investment for fuel economy. My question is what all gauges work? it says that you can get all these extra gauges with the xgauge software but that some are vehicle specific and the website doesnt say what gauges to what vehicle. So if anyone has ran this on an 04 or similar im curious now.
May 9, 201114 yr Never had any issues with either the series 1 or the version 2 that I have had now for about 8 months now. It stays plugged in all the time and never a hiccup with either one.FT
May 9, 201114 yr Owner These are looking like they might be a good investment for fuel economy. My question is what all gauges work? it says that you can get all these extra gauges with the xgauge software but that some are vehicle specific and the website doesnt say what gauges to what vehicle. So if anyone has ran this on an 04 or similar im curious now. The rule of thumb is typical the ScanGauge II can see all factory sensor on the truck. So like I know there is no fuel pressure sensor for the lift pump so there is no fuel pressure gauge for the low side. It just a matter of addressing the PCM or ECM and getting the information.
May 10, 201114 yr The rule of thumb is typical the ScanGauge II can see all factory sensor on the truck. That's a good general rule, but there are exceptions like rail pressure is known by the ECM on 03/04, but the SG doesn't seem to be able to read it.
May 10, 201114 yr Owner That's a good general rule, but there are exceptions like rail pressure is known by the ECM on 03/04, but the SG doesn't seem to be able to read it. Also like the oil pressure is known by the ECM but SG II can't see it either... I know what you mean...
May 10, 201114 yr Also like the oil pressure is known by the ECM but SG II can't see it either... I know what you mean... I wish it was known by the ECM on a 3rd gen... I bet if you work with SG you could get a PID for it. I beleive other OBDII gauges show it.
May 10, 201114 yr Owner One of the new boxes has a connection to the OBDII port and picks up the Oil pressure and Boost pressure correctly... So yes SGII most likely could if we had the proper PID code for it.
Mike, I was wondering about the Scangauge. Is it a simple plug and play setup? I am interested in getting on.Al