Learning Center
Diagnostic tool databases are updated three times per year for major platforms like Jaltest, but new engine models released by manufacturers can take a few months to years to appear in production diagnostic software. This lag is unavoidable and reflects the time required to discover, validate, and test new engine configurations.
Most technicians don't need more data, they need clarity. A good diagnostic tool should let you work across multiple engine brands, diagnose both gas and diesel, run tests and calibrations, access wiring diagrams and troubleshooting steps, and solve problems without switching tools or guessing. If your tool can't do that, it becomes a bottleneck.
Every technician using an independent diagnostic tool eventually encounters this frustration: you buy a new software package, connect to a brand-new engine, and discover coverage is incomplete. The tool feels like it's holding back. In most cases, it's not holding back, coverage simply hasn't been developed yet. This lag happens to every independent platform, regardless of brand.
One comprehensive diagnostic tool absolutely can work on multiple engine types and brands, and that capability is a major competitive advantage. Jaltest from Marine Diagnostic Tools supports dozens of marine engine brands with 85 to 90 percent coverage per brand. For independent shops, this multi-brand capability eliminates the need for multiple expensive systems and allows you to service any engine that customers bring in.
Mobile marine technicians face a unique diagnostic problem: you work on many different boats with different engine brands. One call is a Yamaha outboard. The next call is a Mercury inboard. The call after that is a Volvo diesel. You can't carry a separate diagnostic tool for every brand. You need one versatile tool that handles any engine you encounter.
If you've owned a diagnostic tool for any length of time, you've probably experienced the frustration of learning that the tool couldn't diagnose an engine model you're working on. Maybe you bought the tool two years ago, and now you're facing a newer engine variant that isn't in your database. This is where software updates become absolutely critical. But how do updates actually happen? When should you expect them? What new coverage will they bring?