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darrinh Fordmods Newbie
Posts: 7 Joined: 17 May 2005 Location: sydney NSW, Australia
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Posted: Tue May 17, 2005 1:05 pm Post subject: 1999 AU -> OBDII compliant? |
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anybody know if that model is OBD-II compliant?, from the information i've read, would suggest that it is, but i have tried a scan tool (www.scantool.net), using the PWM protocol, which is used, at least, for US delivered Fords, and it doesnt work?, i really interested in accessing the error codes.
thanks.[/quote] |
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darrinh Fordmods Newbie
Posts: 7 Joined: 17 May 2005 Location: sydney NSW, Australia
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 12:12 am Post subject: |
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i ordered one of those already, from the research ive done, its mandatory for all US delivered cars to be OBDII compliant,but no such regulation exists in Australia, so manufacturers in Australia dont often bother.
The connector on the falcon very closely matches the SAEJ1850-PWM OBDII protocol, but as noted, the scantool did not like this,the NGS or WDS systems will work but i dont have a spare $3 or $4K!. so when i get the scantool from ebay, im going to probe the lines with my oscilloscope and try to see if the ECU responds at all to the scantool queries, it could be the (Ford) ECU requires some intial handshake before giving up the info or that a line needs to be pulled up or down. |
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Disco Frank Fordmods Junkie
Age:29 Posts: 13062 Joined: 05 Nov 2004 Location: Perth WA, Australia
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 4:26 am Post subject: |
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dude let us know if this works....
as far as i know the AU is OBII
but i taold this to nager after he tried the tool on his cars, and it did not work what it could be is that since the tool is US made it only recognises/reads us/european vehicles ( ie code wise ) i mean what AUS vehicles are in the us/europe ( yer yer ok the munro )
hence the scan tool may just need to be Flashed with the aussie code or somethign for it to work on the OBII cars  |
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Disco Frank Fordmods Junkie
Age:29 Posts: 13062 Joined: 05 Nov 2004 Location: Perth WA, Australia
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 4:31 am Post subject: |
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just found this on the link nanger posted
ake sure the ignition is in the 2nd position. Your car OBD-II connector has 16 pins:
1. ECU
2. J1850 bus + , VPW data, PWM data
3. engine rpm signal
4. chassis ground
5. signal ground
6. CAN High (J2284)
7. ISO 9141-2 K line (ECU), engine load data, etc
8. ignition
9. ABS,traction control,stability control, electronic brake proportioning, Brake Assist System, antislip regulation, electronic shift lever detector
10. J1850 bus - , PWM data
11. transmission
12. Activity Module/Extended Activity Module, transfer case
13. airbag, seatbelt, SRS, audio, navigation, CD changer, teleaid
14. CAN Low (J2284)
15. ISO 9142-2 L line
16. battery power positive (+14V)
Note: If your car has one or two green or blue pins above, this unit will work on your car. I do not have a product that works on yellow pins (CAN protocol) yet. Other pin 1,3,8,9,11-13 are manufacture discretion pins, could be different function or empty. |
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darrinh Fordmods Newbie
Posts: 7 Joined: 17 May 2005 Location: sydney NSW, Australia
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 9:37 am Post subject: |
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| Disco Frank wrote: | dude let us know if this works....
as far as i know the AU is OBII
but i taold this to nager after he tried the tool on his cars, and it did not work what it could be is that since the tool is US made it only recognises/reads us/european vehicles ( ie code wise ) i mean what AUS vehicles are in the us/europe ( yer yer ok the munro )
hence the scan tool may just need to be Flashed with the aussie code or somethign for it to work on the OBII cars  |
there are 4 protocols within OBDII, SAEJ1850-PWM,SAEJ1850-VPW,ISO 9141 (Asia) & KWP2000, i still think its PWM, but perhaps has some particular sequence to initialize the interface, which technically, means it is not OBDII compliant. |
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Nanger Fordmods Stock as a Rock
Age:38 Posts: 188 Joined: 06 Nov 2004 Location: Melbourne VIC, Australia
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 9:51 am Post subject: |
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| Disco Frank wrote: | just found this on the link nanger posted
ake sure the ignition is in the 2nd position. Your car OBD-II connector has 16 pins:
1. ECU
2. J1850 bus + , VPW data, PWM data
3. engine rpm signal
4. chassis ground
5. signal ground
6. CAN High (J2284)
7. ISO 9141-2 K line (ECU), engine load data, etc
8. ignition
9. ABS,traction control,stability control, electronic brake proportioning, Brake Assist System, antislip regulation, electronic shift lever detector
10. J1850 bus - , PWM data
11. transmission
12. Activity Module/Extended Activity Module, transfer case
13. airbag, seatbelt, SRS, audio, navigation, CD changer, teleaid
14. CAN Low (J2284)
15. ISO 9142-2 L line
16. battery power positive (+14V)
Note: If your car has one or two green or blue pins above, this unit will work on your car. I do not have a product that works on yellow pins (CAN protocol) yet. Other pin 1,3,8,9,11-13 are manufacture discretion pins, could be different function or empty. |
Frank I checked this out before I bought mine and according to the diagram the AU has the pins in the right spot. Could it be a case of Ford disabling the system somehow? The other thing I don't understand is if OBD II is supposed to be a standard why is there a few different protocols? Sort of defeats the purpose. |
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4.9 EF Futura Moderator
Age:27 Posts: 8658 Joined: 05 Nov 2004 Location: Adelaide CBD SA, Australia
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 12:28 pm Post subject: |
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Yeah, OBD2 gets even better.... the standard legislated certain 'minimums' that the protocol had to adhere to - the kind of data needed, the manner in which it communicated...
But then there are 'enhanced' versions specific to each manufacturer.. which provide information above and beyond the OBD standards, and I think this is where ECU flashing comes into it...
http://www.obdii.com/connector.html
And its home page
http://www.obdii.com/
May have little relevance to Australia.... god bless america  |
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4.9 EF Futura Moderator
Age:27 Posts: 8658 Joined: 05 Nov 2004 Location: Adelaide CBD SA, Australia
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 12:35 pm Post subject: |
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More info:
Seems like OBDII kicked off in 03 here, and will be required buy 08... ah well, we're only 12 years behind...
http://norcom.net.au/~bpt/can_scan_tool.htm
Might wanna try your scan tools on an explorer or focus or probe or something.... |
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darrinh Fordmods Newbie
Posts: 7 Joined: 17 May 2005 Location: sydney NSW, Australia
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 2:02 pm Post subject: |
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| 4.9 EF Futura wrote: | More info:
Seems like OBDII kicked off in 03 here, and will be required buy 08... ah well, we're only 12 years behind...
http://norcom.net.au/~bpt/can_scan_tool.htm
Might wanna try your scan tools on an explorer or focus or probe or something.... |
yeah, seen that page, the CAN protocol is to replace all previous OBDII protocols, at least for Ford, also, i read somewhere that there is OBDIII in the works.
anyway, i want to get something to work, i dont want to have to 'assume the position' at a stealership or local garage, ive always done my own work, but on vehicles without much in the way of computerisation.
Last edited by darrinh on Wed May 18, 2005 2:04 pm, edited 1 time in total |
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Nanger Fordmods Stock as a Rock
Age:38 Posts: 188 Joined: 06 Nov 2004 Location: Melbourne VIC, Australia
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 2:02 pm Post subject: |
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| Another problem I have found is locating the connector on the car. Jap cars are easy, usually under the dash, but Euro cars hide them, under consuls behind panels ect. It seems its law that they have to have them but you are allowed to hide them if you like. |
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darrinh Fordmods Newbie
Posts: 7 Joined: 17 May 2005 Location: sydney NSW, Australia
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 4:15 pm Post subject: |
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ok. apparently ford uses something called SCP:
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Nanger Fordmods Stock as a Rock
Age:38 Posts: 188 Joined: 06 Nov 2004 Location: Melbourne VIC, Australia
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 6:09 pm Post subject: |
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| darrinh wrote: | ok. apparently ford uses something called SCP:
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Ha Ha, got this off the popular mechanics site. Obviously a company car.
here it is..........
In addition to learning more about the mechanical performance of the vehicles, Ford has made other interesting discoveries. One person starts up his F-150 pickup and immediately holds it at wide-open throttle in Park for several minutes every morning. Many customers who say they need more power hardly ever run their engines wide open. |
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darrinh Fordmods Newbie
Posts: 7 Joined: 17 May 2005 Location: sydney NSW, Australia
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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 7:34 pm Post subject: |
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the pinout for my connecter is:
2,4,5,7,10,13,16
Pin-----Ignition On---- /---- OFF
2___________0.05v______0v
4____________gnd______ gnd
5___________ gnd______gnd
7____________10.30v____10.53v
10___________5.06v______0v
13___________0.41v______0v
16___________12v______12v |
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darrinh Fordmods Newbie
Posts: 7 Joined: 17 May 2005 Location: sydney NSW, Australia
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Posted: Tue May 24, 2005 7:09 pm Post subject: |
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i also brought one of these, doesnt work as you have said, so i had a look inside, it contains an Atmel 89C251 microcontroller (based on the old Intel 8051), so i will probably be able to download the code and may be able to modify it to work with AU fords. |
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Nanger Fordmods Stock as a Rock
Age:38 Posts: 188 Joined: 06 Nov 2004 Location: Melbourne VIC, Australia
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Posted: Tue May 24, 2005 8:17 pm Post subject: |
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That would be great if you could do that. Let us know when it happens.
As for my scanner I had to use it today on my 2001 Rodeo V6. This is the second time in 3 weeks that it wont start. It cranks over but nothing else. I connected up the code reader and got code 1626 which is 'B(+) supply to Variable Load Control Module Air Condition Circuit Malfunction'.
Now this sounds like an ISC but I'm not sure. Both times it has started after 10 minutes so I don't really care especially since it's my work car and I leaving work next month. I'll let somebody else worry about it. |
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ItchiOne Fordmods - Smokin em up
Posts: 280 Joined: 30 Mar 2005 Location: Melbourne VIC, Australia
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Posted: Mon May 30, 2005 1:10 pm Post subject: |
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| Nanger wrote: | | ..The other thing I don't understand is if OBD II is supposed to be a standard why is there a few different protocols? Sort of defeats the purpose. |
ODB-II was a mandated minimum standard initially pushed onto US car manufactures and car importers by the US state of california primarily for polution reaons.
Car makers did not and do not want any generic diagnostics tool or open protocols. They live by propritery systems and fight tooth and nail to keep them.
It's then no surprise that as the standard allows for variations to exist, they do exist and as a result we have 4 protocols as well as manufacturer specific extensions being used within ODB-II vehicles.
It's just a typical world of legislative compromises.
What i find anoying is when a manufacturer can use ODB complient systems in their export vehicles (=monaro) and sell a propritery system to the locals in auz (and wors still, sell it for a higher price).
What can you do
Cheers. |
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cheets Fordmods Newbie
Posts: 1 Joined: 11 Feb 2005 Location: Hobart TAS, Australia
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Posted: Wed Jun 08, 2005 1:18 pm Post subject: |
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| The AU falcon OBD-II port and uses SCP (Standard Corporate Protocol) which is a part of the OBD-II standard. Most cheap scantools do not suport all the protocols of the OBD-II standard. Since SCP is a ford specific protocol many do not support it. |
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reaper_falcon Fordmods Newbie
Age:20 Posts: 12 Joined: 21 Jul 2007 Location: Mackay QLD, Australia
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Posted: Tue Apr 22, 2008 6:59 pm Post subject: |
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| has anyone been able to flash their scan tool to include SCP at all? |
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Lukeyson Fordmods - Getting Side Ways
Posts: 871 Joined: 07 Nov 2005 Location: Newcastle NSW, Australia
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Posted: Fri May 02, 2008 9:34 pm Post subject: |
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SCP is just Ford rebranding of J1850 PWM. And most scantools support that.
I had heard that the pinout of the port on the AU was unique, but I'm not sure about that.
I'd love to try an get my ELM to talk to an AU someday. I have a mate down the road withw 2 x AU2's that might be able to help (1 is a dual fuel, the other a dedicated LPG)
Lukeyson |
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