Symptom-to-Subsystem Mapping
Reported vehicle behavior is mapped to the correct subsystem first, so the diagnostic path starts where technicians actually troubleshoot.
GearMedic delivers disciplined diagnostic guidance for modern vehicles. Using OBD-II fault codes, symptom-led flow analysis, and machine learning pattern ranking, it turns warning-light uncertainty into a practical repair plan. Start with your vehicle profile, add your codes if available, or proceed by symptoms.
Already have a scanner code? GearMedic walks you through a precise, code-guided diagnosis. No scanner? Follow the guided symptom path — your vehicle's behavior tells the story.
GearMedic combines structured decision-tree diagnostics, statistical data analysis, and machine learning pattern recognition for check engine troubleshooting, fault isolation, and repair planning.
Reported vehicle behavior is mapped to the correct subsystem first, so the diagnostic path starts where technicians actually troubleshoot.
When OBD-II codes are present, fault data is combined with symptom inputs to narrow likely root causes with workshop-level context.
Each report is organized into severity, probable causes, expected cost ranges, and practical next steps for repair planning.
Year, make, model, engine data, and region-specific context help prioritize realistic failure patterns for your exact vehicle configuration.
Editorial guides on fault patterns, repair strategy, and the real mechanical systems behind OBD-II codes.
An OBD-II P-code is a standardized diagnostic trouble code triggered when the vehicle detects a fault. GearMedic translates that code into probable causes, urgency, and a clear repair path.
Yes. Leave the code fields blank and follow the guided symptom path. Choose the problem area, vehicle system, and part group, then select what you feel while driving.
GearMedic applies vehicle profile data, fault-code interpretation, and guided symptom analysis so the output is more specific than a generic DTC definition page.
Yes. It helps you understand likely failure points, repair urgency, realistic cost ranges, and the right questions to ask before approving work.