Technology Could Stop You Working On Your Own Car, Whether You Like It Or Not
Working on your own car is one of the most satisfying things a car guy or girl can do. There’s the satisfaction of actually completing the work, for starters, and that of learning or practicing skills.
Since this small-scale work generally revolves around older, cheaper cars you could say it’s just a hobby. You could say it’s just about saving labour costs. But the truth for many of us is that it feels like a way of life, building a bond between man and machine that’s forged by the former’s unique understanding of the latter. And this way of life is coming under threat.
Especially in Europe and Japan, where the supply of interesting cars that can be completely serviced at home is dwindling towards none, this is a problem. Eventually the same could become true for America, although the aftermarket parts industry is so strong in the US that it’s hard to see the issue getting out of hand.
More and more systems in ageing cars are controlled by electronics, be it ever-more complex fuel injection, adjustable suspension or variable-ratio steering. These are the cars we want to be working on at some point, but there is an ever-decreasing amount of problems that spanner monkeys at home can fix themselves.
The sorts of systems we’re talking about often have mechanical components that need replacing from time to time, and it’s possible that modern electronics won’t hinder that. But examples like closed ECU units designed to prevent tampering will stop a big chunk of the fun stuff we like to do with cars.
Then look at the sorts of things that are becoming more common, like electronically-adjustable chassis dynamics. Even ordinary cars are being given ‘comfort’ and ‘sport’ settings these days. If a strut fails it can be replaced, but if the electronics controlling the dampers go haywire, what do you do then? At the moment, that’s not something the average tool kit can fix.
Likewise media screens. Almost everything new has a big touchscreen these days. If one fails outside of its warranty, you’ll have no choice but to take it to a dealer who’ll charge you a laughable amount of money to fix it. You could try to get hold of the parts alone with a view to dismantling the dashboard and installing the new unit yourself, but the software, if it’s separate, is likely to be kept within the official dealer network.
As we move forward into a time when cities around the globe are being forced to take drastic measures to cut air pollution, electric and hydrogen-powered cars are inevitable. Whether we like it or not, our dailies in 20 years are likely to be a lot quieter than the ones we pilot today. And just imagine trying to work on an ‘engine’ that only has one moving part. Not very satisfying, relatively speaking, and the hazards linked to electric and hydrogen drivetrains will make specialist training essential – maybe even a legal requirement. If electric cars are inevitable, the home mechanic is going to be reduced to a bit-part player.
This problem clearly has boundaries. The march of technology isn’t going to prevent us changing wheels, brakes, the majority of suspension parts, exhausts (while they’re still used) and lighting, but while the age of internal combustion lasts, it’s possible that software might start to hinder tuning and/or modifications to the combustion process.
Tesla has shown the world that it’s already possible to make fast electric cars, if not amazing-handling ones. Maybe in the future people will start transplanting Model S drivetrains into Nissan Leafs, but that’s not going to require the same set of skills as engine swaps today. Effectively, we’re almost certainly going to have to retrain ourselves or stick to the unchanged basics. Anyway, what would be the point in modifying electric cars for performance when there’s no soul to extract?
Maybe a new generation will take our place; a generation that takes electric power as the norm and figures out ways to spice up what looks like a pretty boring automotive future. Then again, maybe not. Maybe people will simply lose interest. Maybe the number of people who hang on to older, more mechanical cars and keep them alive with constant tinkering will only decrease, until in 100 years just a few anachronistic oddballs remain. We hope not, but in reality we won’t even get a say.
Comments
All cars will have a place even if it’s cruise nights and car show or at the track. It’s our heritage.
I will stay with cars as long as I physically can. Just keep the noise, keep the manual transmission, and keep the ability to drive ourselves.
My neighbors always give me a weird look when they walk by. It’s like they never saw someone working on their own car before.
EV mods: Wire/coil swaps, bearing mods, final drive change, battery mod (EV enthusiasts often use Chevy Volt batteries and Tesla motors when building custom EV cars), and software tuning.
I’ve been driving electric cars for over 20 years and yes.
You’re just forgetting programmable ECU so you can change the characteristics of the handling.
Electric cars… Just think how terrible it would be. You already have a bad day if you forget a charger for your phone when youre going out for a holiday but just think how bad your day would be if there wouldn’t be any charging stations for your drivable laptop.
1st gen cummnis is way better cause it will run on basically everything (I assume that if you would put some enviromentalists in the intake it would burn them too) and It is mecanical, you’ve got 100% controll over your car.
This means that we need to get more electronical and IT education to get over our cars’ problems… I don’t think it’s a big problem… Of course I’m an enemy of fully electronic vehicles, but… New restrictions and laws gives us opportunity, to get more and more knowledge… Of course we get less space for tuning etc, but isn’t it good for our brains? we still can get some good old cars, but electro-car isn’t that bad for daily driving…
Well… As a car guy i think there is always something for us to do, but as a future mechanical engineer I’m on the “electric side of power”… And remember, that even Copernicus Heliocentric Theory was criticised at the begening… maybe we could get some new idea, that could feed the wolf, and save the sheep :) Give me a reply, let’s all think about it
Simpler, more modular; its a good thing. Big things can always be worked like brakes or suspension etc, You don’t need to improve what works already. For the rest of it; Chiptuning, OBD2 tuning will never go away.
I couldn’t help myself
I like electric cars and would rather modify electric cars - then again I like electronics and have no mechanical skills. Converting retro cars to electric will be the future
Well, seeing as I’m still in college I won’t be buying new cars anytime soon. Either way, I think we’ll be fine. Some things will be harder, others easier. We’ll adapt and overcome as gearheads have throughout the decades. I’ll be driving my M3 and Cougar for the foreseeable future. Having a new fancy self-driving electric car would be nice for commutes and my older cars would keep me happy gearhead-wise. Best of both worlds.