Car Repair – Auto Repair & Tuning – Auto Technician Training

Discussion in 'Free Courses - Promo Codes & Deals' started by admin, Apr 16, 2021.

    
  1. admin

    admin Administrator Staff Member


    What you’ll learn

    • Car Parts and Engine System
    • Different Engine Types
    • Electricity Fundamentals
    • Car Electronic Components
    • Chassis System and Car Body
    • Car Suspension System
    • Buzzers, Relays, Batteries, Switches and other Electronic Components
    • Microcontrollers
    • Camber and Castle Angle, Toi-in and Toe-out
    • Transmission Fundamentals
    • Manual, Automatic and CVT Transmission
    • Electronic Circuits
    • Electrical Control Unit (ECU) Inspecting and Hacking
    • Car Spark Plugs
    • Building your Car Repair Shop
    • Car Oil Change
    • Reprogramming Key Immobilizer
    • ECU Tuning
    • Car Fluid Check
    • Car Exhaust System
    • Chip Tunning Stages
    • Car Brake System
    • Working With CAN Bus
    • Can BUS Fundamentals
    • Can Fuzzing
    • OBD II / OBD 2 Diagnostics
    • Car Turbo
    • Car Key Programming with IM600
    • Car Key Programming with PC / OBD2
    • ECU Firmware Backup with KTAG
    • Car Lighting System
    • Opening your own GARAGE
    • and Lots of other Awesome Lectures —>

    Show less
    Requirements

    • No prerequisites or requirements
    Description


    One of the things that I find most interesting about automotive technology is how it advances and changes. It is also interesting that ideas from many years ago often return to favour. In this course I have therefore concentrated on core technologies, in other words how the technology works, rather than giving too many examples from specific vehicles. However, I have included some examples of Formula 1 technology, arguably the pinnacle of automotive engineering. Did you know that the 2011 McLaren MP4-26 F1 car is made of 11500 components? And that’s counting the engine as one!

    • Why Every Car Technician Should Know Electricy in Cars ?

    In the past it was possible for technicians to work their entire careers and be able to almost completely avoid the vehicle’s electrical systems. They would specialize in engines, steering/suspension, or brakes. Today there is not a system on the vehicle that is immune to the role of electrical circuits. Engine controls, electronic suspension systems, and antilock brakes arecommon on today’s vehicles. Even electrical systems that were once thought of as being simple have evolved to computer controls. Headlights are now pulse-width modulated using highside drivers and will automatically brighten and dim based on the light intensity of oncomingtraffic. Today’s vehicles are equipped with twenty or more computers, laser-guided cruise control, sonar park assist, infrared climate control, fiber optics, and radio frequency transponders and decoders. Simple systems have become more computer reliant.

    Even the tires have computers involved, with the addition of tire pressure monitoring systems!

    Today’s technician must possess a full and complete electrical background to be able to succeed. The future will provide great opportunities for those technicians who have prepared themselves properly.

    • Car Tuning

    Cars are literally the vehicles by which we see the world, and by which the world sees us. Second in value only to the homes in which we live, cars are the reflection of who we are when we are in transit — out in the world commuting to work or having fun on the weekend. They are also the closet bond most people ever form with a machine. We think a movement, and the car translates that thought, that impulse, into action. The car becomes an extension of ourselves. Few things are as often mutually desired and accessible as an automobile.With that possession comes opportunity, as some folks see it, to do something different. Something cool. As cars become more and more alike with each passing model year, the drive for owners to individualize them grows increasingly stronger. We want to feel something towards our cars.

    • Car ECU Hacking and Tuning

    This Chapter of Course walks you through what it takes to hack a vehicle. We begin with an overview of the policies surrounding vehicle security and then delve in to how to check whether your vehicle is secure and how to find vulnerabilities in more sophisticated hardware systems.

    The automotive industry has churned out some amazing vehicles, with complicated electronics and computer systems, but it has released little information about what makes those systems work. Once you understand how a vehicle’s network works and how it communicates within its own system and outside of it, you’ll be better able to diagnose and troubleshoot problems.

    Who this course is for:

    • This Car Repair course is for Car lovers who wants to learn eveything about Car.
    • If you want to dive into Car industry and build your Car Repair Shop.
    • Students that curious about learning Car Repair.
    • Students that curious about learning Car Electronics
    • Car Repair Training
    • Technician Training
    • Automotive Training
    • Auto Technician Course

    Continue reading...
     


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