Emissions Control & OBD-II Diagnostics
OBD-II system operation, DTC interpretation, catalytic converter, EGR, PCV, secondary air injection, oxygen sensors, and scan tool diagnostics.
- Explain the purpose and function of the OBD-II system
- Interpret DTC codes and check engine light behavior
- Describe catalytic converter operation and oxygen sensor monitoring
- Explain EGR, PCV, and secondary air injection system functions
- Use scan tools and sensor data for systematic diagnosis
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OBD-II System, DTCs & Scan Tool Diagnostics
What is OBD-II?
The purpose of the OBD-II system in modern vehicles is to monitor emissions and engine performance. OBD-II (On-Board Diagnostics, second generation) continuously checks all emissions-related systems and sets diagnostic trouble codes (DTCs) when problems are detected. It became mandatory on all vehicles sold in North America starting in 1996.
The Scan Tool
A scan tool is used to read diagnostic trouble codes and vehicle data. It connects to the 16-pin DLC (Data Link Connector) under the dashboard and communicates with the vehicle's ECU to retrieve:
- Diagnostic Trouble Codes (DTCs) - stored fault codes
- Freeze frame data - conditions when the code was set
- Live sensor data - real-time readings from all sensors
- Readiness monitors - status of OBD-II self-tests
Check Engine Light Behavior
A steady check engine light (MIL - Malfunction Indicator Lamp) indicates a detected fault that may affect emissions. However, a flashing check engine light indicates a severe misfire that can damage the catalytic converter. When the MIL is flashing, reduce speed immediately and have the vehicle diagnosed as soon as possible.
Steady MIL
Detected fault stored in memory
May affect emissions
Schedule diagnosis soon
Safe to drive carefully
Flashing MIL
Severe misfire occurring NOW
Catalytic converter damage risk
Reduce speed immediately
Do not ignore - diagnose ASAP
DTC Code Structure
A P0300 trouble code indicates random/multiple cylinder misfire detected. DTC codes follow a standard format:
| Position | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| First letter | System | P = Powertrain, B = Body, C = Chassis, U = Network |
| Second digit | Generic (0) or Manufacturer (1) | 0 = SAE standard |
| Third digit | Subsystem | 3 = Ignition/Misfire |
| Last two | Specific fault | 00 = Random/Multiple |
P0301-P0312
While P0300 means random misfire, codes P0301 through P0312 identify misfires on specific cylinders. P0301 = Cylinder 1 misfire, P0302 = Cylinder 2, and so on. This helps pinpoint the failing cylinder.
The OBD-II system monitors emissions and engine performance. A scan tool reads DTCs and vehicle data. A flashing check engine light means severe misfire - risk of catalytic converter damage. P0300 is random/multiple misfire.