Corvette Customer Communcation Confusion [E235]
Thanks to our Partners, Pico Technology, Autel, and Independent Wrench Jobs
In this episode of Diagnosing the Aftermarket A to Z, Matt Fanslow tells the story of a modified 1994 Corvette that came in with a hesitation, backfire, and cut-out concern under light-load highway driving. The vehicle had already been looked at elsewhere, and the customer believed the problem was inside the PCM. What sounded at first like a computer problem eventually turned into a lesson in secondary ignition leakage, diagnostic assumptions, customer expectations, and the danger of two people using the same words to mean very different things.
The episode starts with the question, “Can you test my computer?” Matt interpreted that as a request to diagnose why the vehicle was not running correctly. The customer meant something much more literal: open the PCM, test it on a bench, and determine what had failed inside the module. That misunderstanding created real tension once Matt found evidence pointing away from the computer and toward the ignition system.
Technically, the case had plenty of reasons to look complicated. The Corvette was a 1994 OBD-I vehicle with an OBD-II-style connector, an aftermarket tune, a DTC 42 related to electronic spark timing, and an OptiSpark distributor system. Matt considered scan-tool access, PCM powers and grounds, tune corruption, OptiSpark signals, and even inspected the PCM itself. But the actual fix was far more ordinary: spark plugs and plug wires. A light mist of water exposed secondary ignition leakage, with arcing visible around the plug wires and spark plug area.
The larger point of the story is not just that simple failures can hide behind complicated symptoms. It is that assumptions can create their own problems. The customer had one expectation. The shop had another. Nobody was necessarily acting in bad faith, but the mismatch still led to frustration, anger, and a near breakdown in trust. Matt reflects on how one better question at the beginning, “What do you mean when you say test the computer?” could have changed the entire interaction.
Topics Discussed
- Diagnosing a modified 1994 Corvette
- OBD-I vehicles with OBD-II-style connectors
- DTC 42 and electronic spark timing
- OptiSpark diagnostic considerations
- Aftermarket tuning and corrupt tune concerns
- PCM inspection and module-level testing limitations
- Secondary ignition leakage
- Spark plug and plug wire failures
- How modified vehicles can bias diagnostic thinking
- Why customer language needs clarification
- The difference between testing a system and testing a module
- Managing expectations before diagnostic work begins
- Honest misunderstandings between shops and customers
Key Takeaways
- “Can you test my computer?” may mean very different things depending on who is asking.
- A vehicle that looks complicated can still have a basic failure.
- Modified vehicles can make it harder to avoid diagnostic bias.
- Customer frustration is not always about the repair itself. Sometimes it is about expectations that were never clarified.
- Asking one more question up front can prevent a major communication problem later.
- Not every misunderstanding needs a villain. Sometimes both sides are operating from different definitions.
Thanks to our Partner, Pico Technology
Are you chasing elusive automotive problems? Pico Technology empowers you to see what's really happening. Their PicoScope oscilloscopes transform your diagnostic capabilities. Visit PicoAuto.com
Thanks to our Partner, Autel
From drivability diagnostics and TPMS service to ADAS and advanced safety systems, Autel helps technicians follow OEM procedures and repair with confidence. Learn more at Autel.com
Thanks to our Partner, Independent Wrench Jobs
Independent Wrench Jobs is a new, tech-only community to help you find better independent shops—fair dispatch, steady work, real leadership. No games.
Built by Technician Find—serving the industry since 2017. Join free at IndependentWrenchJobs.com
Contact Information
The Automotive Repair Podcast Network: https://automotiverepairpodcastnetwork.com/
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