gusu
15+ Year Contributor
- 1,950
- 33
- Sep 9, 2009
-
Independence,
Oregon
Hey everyone,
I hate AI, and I hate OpenAI even more. In an attempt to run up their debt, I give their AI the most difficult to troubleshoot things I have come across when working on my DSM or friend's cars. What I have found is that it is shockingly incredible at diagnosing the issue, even with REALLY bizarre issues.
I have given it some softball questions like diagnosing a bad ISC and ChatGPT got through the troubleshooting process pretty quick. I have even gone as far as to give it very specific problems with citing mods, tuning parameters, and giving it logs I pulled off of old forum posts. It surprisingly came up with pretty accurate or at least reasonable ideas as to what is wrong and why, especially if you feed it data that would be observed during a test drive or a tuning session. As long as you aren't a moron and tell it you installed a upgraded fuel system instead of telling it you specifically used a Walbro 255, 850cc injectors, etc, it is surprisngly good at pulling in the relevant data for the parts and finding obscure informationg that you may not know about specific parts and how they interact with each other an the car/tune overall.
I'm curious what everyone else's experience has been like when using AI platforms to work on cars.
I hate AI, and I hate OpenAI even more. In an attempt to run up their debt, I give their AI the most difficult to troubleshoot things I have come across when working on my DSM or friend's cars. What I have found is that it is shockingly incredible at diagnosing the issue, even with REALLY bizarre issues.
I have given it some softball questions like diagnosing a bad ISC and ChatGPT got through the troubleshooting process pretty quick. I have even gone as far as to give it very specific problems with citing mods, tuning parameters, and giving it logs I pulled off of old forum posts. It surprisingly came up with pretty accurate or at least reasonable ideas as to what is wrong and why, especially if you feed it data that would be observed during a test drive or a tuning session. As long as you aren't a moron and tell it you installed a upgraded fuel system instead of telling it you specifically used a Walbro 255, 850cc injectors, etc, it is surprisngly good at pulling in the relevant data for the parts and finding obscure informationg that you may not know about specific parts and how they interact with each other an the car/tune overall.
I'm curious what everyone else's experience has been like when using AI platforms to work on cars.