Technical Anyone had any success with an ELM323/327 interface

Currently reading:
Technical Anyone had any success with an ELM323/327 interface

Hi,
I am trying to get the OBD connection in my Fiat engine [its a fiat 1.3 MJT engine sourced to a Indian manufacturer, TATA].

These are commands that I used and the buffer dump, Can anyone explain what is the result mean:

ATZ
>ATL1
OK
>ATE1
OK
>ATTP5
OK
>ATSH 8110F1
OK
>1800FF00
BUS INIT: ERROR
>atbd
05 81 10 F1 81 03 FF 00 F1 0F 10 00
 
From looking at what is in the buffer it would seem that the vehicle doesnt use the fiat protocol. The ECU may be at a different address to what Fiat uses as standard (0x10h). In fact even though its a Fiat engine it may well use a different ecu, or the same ecu with some OEM software on it.

For more help you may want to join up to the opendiag group here - http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/opendiag/

lots of information on there regardign different vehicles and applications.

Best of luck

Dan
 
I think not, dan... If you go buy a Ford Fiesta for example, the MK5 model, they use PWM or VPW, rather than the EOBD method... I think it has to do with the origins, rather than where it is sold... Japan for instance adopted EOBD themselves, and that is why you see it in japanese cars a lot ;)
 
They are two different things, VPW/PWM is electrical physical standard, and is also part of the EOBD standard, as is ISO-14230-2 same as Fiats.

But VPW/PWM isnt comparible to EOBD as its part of it..

VPW/PWM is just the physical transmission method, and has nothing to do with the data exchange.

Like we have been discussing here, our fiats are using ISO 14230-2, which can be compared to VPM/PWM, and is also part of the EOBD standard. But as we found, not all Fiats that use ISO14230-2 are EOBD, otherwise they would respond to ecu address 0x33 as well as 0x10h

@ The question. Looking on the google, it would seem that the Tata's use ISO-9141-2. Could be worth setting the protocol to that and trying again perhaps?
 
@ The question. Looking on the google, it would seem that the Tata's use ISO-9141-2. Could be worth setting the protocol to that and trying again perhaps?

I have already tried this but to no avail. Will try again and post the dump to see if it gives out anything
 
No dan, the protocols change a lot, in regards to how they work... Not even the working voltage is the same.

Our cars (the pre-EOBD ones) use a variation of ISO9141-2 called Fiat 9141. There's a specification for it posted a few pages behind.

I'm guessing your Multijet engine uses the same protocol! (y)
 
Nope, they dont. read the document. The pre EOBD fiat cars use ISO-14230-2, prior to ISO14230-2, they used ISO9141..

Why do you think you were selecting ATTP5 a few pages back? KWP2000 is ISO14230-2 - not ISO9141...

It tells you this is on the SAE and ISO documents, Ive read them
 
Last edited:
Back
Top