It may look neat, but really all that is inside is an LED, a couple switches and a circuit board wired with sound so you can hear the codes. "Code reader" is a misnomer with those, all it does is light up with teh codes, you still have to interpret them. With an actual code reader, it reads teh signals, and displays the code numbers on the screen. You can accomplish the same thing as teh LED reader with a cheap 12V testing light. Except it costs 50 bux.
Take the LED one back and get the LCD, even though it is still $50, it takes the hassel out of having to write down how many times the fucking light flashes.
Take the LED one back and get the LCD, even though it is still $50, it takes the hassel out of having to write down how many times the fucking light flashes.
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