Diagnostics/Electronic Workshop Manuals, anyone?
Discussion
Any of you use diagnostic software or electronic workshop manuals at home? I currently struggle with a crappy old laptop that's a bit too big and crap.
Hoping to have a garage/workshop space soon so I was thinking about buying a big old desktop cheap and bolting it to a metal computer desk so it can be wheeled around - spend < £50 and have a system that will comfortably run all of the software/stuff I need to comfortably tinker.
Anyone got a better but still poverty stricken solution?
Hoping to have a garage/workshop space soon so I was thinking about buying a big old desktop cheap and bolting it to a metal computer desk so it can be wheeled around - spend < £50 and have a system that will comfortably run all of the software/stuff I need to comfortably tinker.
Anyone got a better but still poverty stricken solution?
Get a CRT monitor if you can find one, it'll work better in the winter. My el-cheapo LCD screen i put in the garage doesn't want to know me in the winter :-(
I'm beginning to think a cheap tablet's a better solution in the general cases. You can store it in the house. No cables. Mount it on the wall with one of those el-cheapo cradles from the bay. Easy to clean. Reads & searches PDFs well enough. Easy enough to use for online searching. Torque app works alright with a bluetooth dongle, it'll even have a bash at plotting MAF, O2 & FTs (not in the greatest of resolutions mind...)
If you can nab one of the Samsung Galaxy ones for a few bob second hand (they were only £80 new or something like that) then you'd be laughing - they've got an option to make the screen sensitive enough for wearing gloves.
I'm beginning to think a cheap tablet's a better solution in the general cases. You can store it in the house. No cables. Mount it on the wall with one of those el-cheapo cradles from the bay. Easy to clean. Reads & searches PDFs well enough. Easy enough to use for online searching. Torque app works alright with a bluetooth dongle, it'll even have a bash at plotting MAF, O2 & FTs (not in the greatest of resolutions mind...)
If you can nab one of the Samsung Galaxy ones for a few bob second hand (they were only £80 new or something like that) then you'd be laughing - they've got an option to make the screen sensitive enough for wearing gloves.
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