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My check engine light was on, so I went to an O'Reiley's to buy a diagnostic tool. Basically, they had two versions of the same brand: one that just checked the engine codes and gave you the translation, and one that could read codes and also delete them that cost almost $30 more. After asking a friend, he confirmed that the same basic pricing structure exists across most diagnostic tools.

Why is this the case? Is there a specific reason that erasing codes has to cost so much extra money?

GGMG-he-him
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A read command is the same for all OEM's. The clear command is not. It is supposed to be but there are differences particularly in the early years of OBD11. It has to be tweaked and checked for many different models. Also any command that asks the PCM change its state requires much more care than a read only request.

I have used cheap scanners that did some really weird things when the clear code command was sent.

Fred Wilson
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