How do you improve diagnostic efficiency?

 


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We were talking with the owner of a successful workshop in sydney who told us that, although his technicians productivity is above average, they still seem to have problems with profitability on diagnostics. The workshop has all the latest test equipment, plenty of diagnostic and repair information and well-trained techs. He asked, “What the hell are we missing?”

“Go back to basic diagnostic techniques,” we replied. While most technicians possess the gift of deductive reasoning and state-of-the-art test equipment, they sometimes forget to follow some basic diagnostic techniques. No matter the type of vehicle or how complicated the problem, basic diagnostics begin with asking the right questions. Let’s explore how asking questions throughout the diagnostic process can save time and improve results.

 

It Starts on the Test Drive

Symptom descriptions included on the repair order must be comprehensive and accurate. The more detailed the symptom description is, the less work the technician will need to do. A complete symptom description also minimizes the risk of “fixing the wrong problem” and helps determine where to start the diagnosis. What is the key component in communicating the customer’s concern to the technician? The service advisor has to ask the right questions.

A checklist-style form that helps ask vehicle owners the right questions regarding their vehicle’s problems is a valuable tool. Where can you get these types of forms? You could create your own or you can use our Free Diagnostic Checklist to really help your service advisor get all the facts the technician needs to perform a quick and accurate diagnosis.

 

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Diagnostic Worksheet Download

 

Ask the Customer for Help

You can’t fix what you can’t duplicate! Be sure to duplicate the exact conditions that cause the symptoms to occur. In other words, if the engine misfires only between 40-50 km/hr, don’t drive at 80-100km/hr. This seems like simple advice but this detail is often overlooked.

What do you do when the customer’s concern can’t be duplicated? We've found it very beneficial to ask the owner to come down and test drive the vehicle with you. Let them drive. A customer’s driving habits may differ from yours. Often the symptom can’t be duplicated. Other times, the way the owner drives the vehicle will reproduce the problem more consistently. In either case, the technician benefits. If the problem doesn’t occur, the owner believes you really tried. If it does, you know exactly how to drive the vehicle to duplicate the problem. Now it’s time to call on your scan tool for help. Plug it in, set it to record the PID information and go on a test drive.

 

Keep a Positive Attitude

In troubleshooting, as with any other challenge, a positive attitude will lead to success. You can solve the problem. Don’t panic, don’t get frustrated - be patient. The best way to achieve and maintain a positive attitude is to remember that it’s a mathematical certainty that you will solve any reproducible problem. Above all, remember that your troubleshooting power comes from your troubleshooting process. A well-developed process will be one you can trust time after time. But what do you do when you get stuck? Ask yourself, “Am I too close to the problem?” or “Maybe I need a second opinion?”

 

Working as a Team

Most workshops usually charge an hour for diagnostic time. If you have spent time looking at technical service bulletins, followed a diagnostic flow chart and exhausted the limits of your past experience, you may have consumed more than an hour - with no resolution.

Before you reach the end of the hour, ask for help. Check with other techs in your shop, post the symptoms and the tests you’ve done on the Mechanic.com.au Private Facebook Group (Access Code: MCA69) . Often times, these resources have had different experiences and training. Teamwork and information sharing can be very beneficial in a workshop environment. This not only results in getting the vehicle back to the customer faster, it also fosters positive working relationships among technicians.

Whatever the future holds for the automotive industry and no matter how technical vehicles become, invariably there will be “break downs.” And although vehicles have become more complex, the basic rules of diagnosis haven’t changed. What has changed is the quantity of diagnostic information, the method of its delivery and the technological capabilities of automotive test equipment. As technicians, our job is to repair vehicles quickly and completely. To do that, sometimes we just have to ask the right questions.

 

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