The amber engine light comes on. Your brain immediately quotes you a four-figure repair. The garage charges £50–90 just to tell you what the light means.
Here's the thing the home-mechanic forums agree on, loudly: reading the code yourself is the easy bit. One driver put it perfectly — "Plugged my cheap dongle in, found out it's the EGR valve. I'm not going to fix it myself, but at least I know it's not a major problem, and I don't have to pay someone to diagnose it."
That's the entire pitch for an OBD2 scanner. Not replacing your mechanic — walking into the garage already knowing the answer.
Which is why we like the wired, no-app approach: plug in, read, clear, done. No pairing, no account, no "free trial".
The MOTOPOWERUK OBD2 scanner with battery tester covers 1996+ OBDII/EOBD petrol and diesel cars, needs no app and no subscription, and doubles as a battery health checker. £37.95 — less than one diagnostic fee.
Find the 16-pin port (usually under the steering column), plug in with the ignition on, and read the stored fault codes. Look the code up before clearing it — the code is the clue, not the cure.
Find the 16-pin port (usually under the steering column), plug in with the ignition on, and read the stored fault codes. Look the code up before clearing it — the code is the clue, not the cure.
Find the 16-pin port (usually under the steering column), plug in with the ignition on, and read the stored fault codes. Look the code up before clearing it — the code is the clue, not the cure.
Find the 16-pin port (usually under the steering column), plug in with the ignition on, and read the stored fault codes. Look the code up before clearing it — the code is the clue, not the cure.