> Do some vehicle manufacturers just put insane constraints on the drive cycle monitors?
Yes. Combine with the fact some only pass after certain conditions (eg. over 3000 revs for 10 mins, or idle for 5 mins, or only after 3 starts, only when the outdoor temperature is within this range, etc). Sometimes those conditions aren't stated in the manuals.
That makes the checks passing seem more like a random process and driving more will usually make them pass, eventually.
And drivers without a code reader won't know when it has passed, so they are usually instructed by mechanics to drive a long way to be sure before taking it in for a test (don't want to have to reschedule the test just because you didn't drive it enough).
Yes. Combine with the fact some only pass after certain conditions (eg. over 3000 revs for 10 mins, or idle for 5 mins, or only after 3 starts, only when the outdoor temperature is within this range, etc). Sometimes those conditions aren't stated in the manuals.
That makes the checks passing seem more like a random process and driving more will usually make them pass, eventually.
And drivers without a code reader won't know when it has passed, so they are usually instructed by mechanics to drive a long way to be sure before taking it in for a test (don't want to have to reschedule the test just because you didn't drive it enough).