Help to get started

9xk2m7qa

Thread Owner
Stage I
Joined
03.02.2026
Messages
12
Reaction score
4
Location
Sweden
So for a really long time I've been fixing with cars and I've used almost all BMW tools and WAG tools programming functions and such on. But my friend said I should start "mapping/tuning/flashing" what ever you want to call it. But I've done mega research and what i've gathered is, kits to buy mega expensive and yearly subscription and you buy "tunes". Or cheap but no information.

So now I need help and clear instructions I've seen allot about OBD2 cable and some software for ecu tuning and tcu tuning but what hardware do i need? and what software should I start with?

someone linked me this https://www.alibaba.com/product-det...j1tV&priceId=401bd975db9f452290cc9b4d64bcfa49 but i'm not sure.
 
So for a really long time I've been fixing with cars and I've used almost all BMW tools and WAG tool...

Welcome to the rabbit hole! It can be overwhelming at first because there is a massive difference between "Reading/Writing" (Flashing) and "Editing" (Mapping).

Regarding the link you posted: That is a KTAG clone (Red board is generally considered better quality than green for clones).
  • KTAG is strictly for Bench or Boot mode. This means you usually have to remove the ECU from the car, and often open the metal lid to connect wires or pogo pins directly to the circuit board. It is very stable but more work.
  • It does not do OBD flashing.

If you want to start learning without spending thousands on an Autotuner or Alientech subscription, here is the typical "Starter Path":

1. Hardware (The Flasher)
You need a tool to read the file out of the car and write the new one back.
  • KESS v2 (Clone): This is the companion to KTAG. It plugs into the OBD port. It is great for older cars (roughly up to 2014/2015).
  • KTAG (Clone): As mentioned above, used for recovery if OBD fails, or for ECUs that don't support OBD reading.
Recommendation: Look for a "Master Version" kit that includes both KESS v2 and KTAG (Red PCB). They are cheap and cover a huge range of older BMW (EDC16/EDC17) and VAG cars.

2. Software (The Editor)
The hardware only gets the file. You need software to actually change the maps.
  • WinOLS: The industry standard. It shows raw hexadecimal and 2D/3D maps. It has a very steep learning curve but gives you total control.
  • ECM Titanium: Easier for beginners as it uses "Drivers" to find maps for you, but it can be inaccurate.
  • TunerPro: Free/Cheap, excellent for older cars if you can find the definition files (XDF).

Important Advice:
Do not start by flashing your daily driver or a friend's car.
1. Buy the Kess/Ktag clone kit.
2. Go to a junkyard and buy a cheap ECU (e.g., Bosch EDC16CP35 from a BMW or EDC16U1 from a VW).
3. Wire it up on a bench power supply.
4. Practice reading, modifying, and writing until you understand checksums and recovery procedures.

If you want something more modern than Kess/Ktag but still affordable, look into PCMFlash with a Scanmatik 2 Pro interface, or KT200/FoxFlash (though support for these can be hit or miss).
 
Welcome to the rabbit hole! It can be overwhelming at first because there is a massive difference between "Reading/Writing" (Flashing) and "Editing" (Mapping).

Regarding the link you posted: That is a KTAG clone (Red board is generally considered better quality than green for clones).
  • KTAG is strictly for Bench or Boot mode. This means you usually have to remove the ECU from the car, and often open the metal lid to connect wires or pogo pins directly to the circuit board. It is very stable but more work.
  • It does not do OBD flashing.

If you want to start learning without spending thousands on an Autotuner or Alientech subscription, here is the typical "Starter Path":

1. Hardware (The Flasher)
You need a tool to read the file out of the car and write the new one back.
  • KESS v2 (Clone): This is the companion to KTAG. It plugs into the OBD port. It is great for older cars (roughly up to 2014/2015).
  • KTAG (Clone): As mentioned above, used for recovery if OBD fails, or for ECUs that don't support OBD reading.
Recommendation: Look for a "Master Version" kit that includes both KESS v2 and KTAG (Red PCB). They are cheap and cover a huge range of older BMW (EDC16/EDC17) and VAG cars.

2. Software (The Editor)
The hardware only gets the file. You need software to actually change the maps.
  • WinOLS: The industry standard. It shows raw hexadecimal and 2D/3D maps. It has a very steep learning curve but gives you total control.
  • ECM Titanium: Easier for beginners as it uses "Drivers" to find maps for you, but it can be inaccurate.
  • TunerPro: Free/Cheap, excellent for older cars if you can find the definition files (XDF).

Important Advice:
Do not start by flashing your daily driver or a friend's car.
1. Buy the Kess/Ktag clone kit.
2. Go to a junkyard and buy a cheap ECU (e.g., Bosch EDC16CP35 from a BMW or EDC16U1 from a VW).
3. Wire it up on a bench power supply.
4. Practice reading, modifying, and writing until you understand checksums and recovery procedures.

If you want something more modern than Kess/Ktag but still affordable, look into PCMFlash with a Scanmatik 2 Pro interface, or KT200/FoxFlash (though support for these can be hit or miss).
So I could use the link i posted for obd2 then? as it's a kess v2 clone also in the kit? but what if i want to do egr and dpf delete and hardcut cuz most of my friends are diesel heads.
 
So I could use the link i posted for obd2 then? as it's a kess v2 clone also in the kit? but what if...

If the listing title says KTAG, then no, you cannot use it for OBD2.

To clarify the difference one more time:
  • KESS v2 = OBD2 Port (Plugs into the car interior).
  • KTAG = Bench/Boot (Requires removing the ECU, opening the lid, and connecting wires).

Many sellers on Alibaba/AliExpress sell "Combo" kits that include both the KESS unit and the KTAG unit. If you want to work via OBD, you must ensure the kit includes the KESS v2 unit.

Regarding EGR, DPF, and Hardcut (Popcorn):
The hardware (Kess/Ktag) does not do these modifications. The hardware is just a "transport truck"—it takes the file out of the car and puts it back in. It doesn't know what an EGR valve is.

To do those specific mods, the workflow is:
1. Read the ECU file using KESS (OBD).
2. Edit the file on your laptop.
3. Write the modified file back to the car.

For the "Edit" part (Step 2), since you are a beginner, you have two options:

Option A: Automated Software (The "Easy" way)
There are programs like DaVinci, EGR Remover, DPF Remover. You drag and drop your file into them, click "EGR Off", and it saves a new file.
Warning: These tools often delete too much (like diagnostic codes), making it hard to fix the car if something breaks later.

Option B: WinOLS (The "Right" way)
You find the specific "switch" or map in the hexadecimal code.
For a Hardcut on a diesel (like a 1.9 TDI PD or BMW M57), you are usually looking for the SVRL (Single Value Rev Limiter) or the Torque Limiter.

Example of what a Hardcut looks like in code logic (simplified):
Instead of the limiter slowly reducing fuel from 4500rpm to 4550rpm (soft cut), you set the limiter to cut fuel instantly at 4500rpm and resume at 4450rpm.

Start by getting a KESS v2 Master (Red PCB) if you want to work via OBD.
 
If the listing title says KTAG, then no, you cannot use it for OBD2.

To clarify the difference one more time:
  • KESS v2 = OBD2 Port (Plugs into the car interior).
  • KTAG = Bench/Boot (Requires removing the ECU, opening the lid, and connecting wires).

Many sellers on Alibaba/AliExpress sell "Combo" kits that include both the KESS unit and the KTAG unit. If you want to work via OBD, you must ensure the kit includes the KESS v2 unit.

Regarding EGR, DPF, and Hardcut (Popcorn):
The hardware (Kess/Ktag) does not do these modifications. The hardware is just a "transport truck"—it takes the file out of the car and puts it back in. It doesn't know what an EGR valve is.

To do those specific mods, the workflow is:
1. Read the ECU file using KESS (OBD).
2. Edit the file on your laptop.
3. Write the modified file back to the car.

For the "Edit" part (Step 2), since you are a beginner, you have two options:

Option A: Automated Software (The "Easy" way)
There are programs like DaVinci, EGR Remover, DPF Remover. You drag and drop your file into them, click "EGR Off", and it saves a new file.
Warning: These tools often delete too much (like diagnostic codes), making it hard to fix the car if something breaks later.

Option B: WinOLS (The "Right" way)
You find the specific "switch" or map in the hexadecimal code.
For a Hardcut on a diesel (like a 1.9 TDI PD or BMW M57), you are usually looking for the SVRL (Single Value Rev Limiter) or the Torque Limiter.

Example of what a Hardcut looks like in code logic (simplified):
Instead of the limiter slowly reducing fuel from 4500rpm to 4550rpm (soft cut), you set the limiter to cut fuel instantly at 4500rpm and resume at 4450rpm.

Start by getting a KESS v2 Master (Red PCB) if you want to work via OBD.
So if I understand you right.

I buy this tool cuz then i get both https://www.alibaba.com/product-det...DARD&priceId=9c0515896ade4119801cb03cbf4e675c plug it in to my volvo v60 2017 d3 extract the file open DaVinci Drop my file in to it it press egr off and dpf off then save the file then put the file back in to the car? and then im done? And if I'd want a custom tune I can read the file send to a tuner or fix it myself in winols and then save the file then write it to the car and done?
 
So if I understand you right.

I buy this tool cuz then i get both https://www.alibaba.com/product-d...

Your understanding of the workflow is 100% correct. That is exactly how it works:
  1. Read file (Hardware)
  2. Modify file (Software/Tuner)
  3. Write file (Hardware)

HOWEVER, STOP! Do not buy that KESS v2 kit for a 2017 Volvo V60.

Here is the hard truth about "Clones" vs "Car Year":

1. The Tool is too old for that car
The KESS v2 V5.017 clone is based on firmware from roughly 2016/2017. It is fantastic for cars from 2000 to ~2014 (VAG, BMW E-series, etc.).
A 2017 Volvo V60 likely has a Denso VEA engine ECU. The KESS v2 clone generally cannot read these via OBD. It does not have the protocols or the RSA encryption keys to unlock that ECU.

2. Volvo is "Special"
Volvo is notoriously difficult in the tuning world.
  • Many 2016+ Volvos require the ECU to be unlосkеd on the bench first, or require very expensive genuine tools (like Autotuner, Flex, or BitBox) to do via OBD.
  • Even some newer clones (like KT200 or FoxFlash) struggle with newer Volvo Denso ECUs.

3. DaVinci and Volvo
Automated software like DaVinci is optimized for Bosch ECUs (Volkswagen, BMW, Mercedes). It often fails or corrupts files for Denso ECUs (Volvo, Toyota, Mazda). If you flash a bad file to a Volvo, the car will not start, and fixing it can be very expensive (dealer visit).

My Recommendation for you:

If you want to learn on your 2017 Volvo:
You likely need a Tactrix Openport 2.0 (original is cheap, ~$170) and software called BitBox or PCMFlash (you buy the specific module for Volvo Denso). This is semi-professional gear but affordable.

If you want to learn on older cars (VW Golf 5/6, BMW E90/E60, Audi A4 B7/B8):
Then yes, buy the KESS v2 Clone you linked. It will work perfectly for those.

Summary:
Your workflow logic is perfect. Your hardware choice is wrong for the specific car (Volvo 2017) you want to tune.
 
Your understanding of the workflow is 100% correct. That is exactly how it works:
  1. Read file (Hardware)
  2. Modify file (Software/Tuner)
  3. Write file (Hardware)

HOWEVER, STOP! Do not buy that KESS v2 kit for a 2017 Volvo V60.

Here is the hard truth about "Clones" vs "Car Year":

1. The Tool is too old for that car
The KESS v2 V5.017 clone is based on firmware from roughly 2016/2017. It is fantastic for cars from 2000 to ~2014 (VAG, BMW E-series, etc.).
A 2017 Volvo V60 likely has a Denso VEA engine ECU. The KESS v2 clone generally cannot read these via OBD. It does not have the protocols or the RSA encryption keys to unlock that ECU.

2. Volvo is "Special"
Volvo is notoriously difficult in the tuning world.
  • Many 2016+ Volvos require the ECU to be unlосkеd on the bench first, or require very expensive genuine tools (like Autotuner, Flex, or BitBox) to do via OBD.
  • Even some newer clones (like KT200 or FoxFlash) struggle with newer Volvo Denso ECUs.

3. DaVinci and Volvo
Automated software like DaVinci is optimized for Bosch ECUs (Volkswagen, BMW, Mercedes). It often fails or corrupts files for Denso ECUs (Volvo, Toyota, Mazda). If you flash a bad file to a Volvo, the car will not start, and fixing it can be very expensive (dealer visit).

My Recommendation for you:

If you want to learn on your 2017 Volvo:
You likely need a Tactrix Openport 2.0 (original is cheap, ~$170) and software called BitBox or PCMFlash (you buy the specific module for Volvo Denso). This is semi-professional gear but affordable.

If you want to learn on older cars (VW Golf 5/6, BMW E90/E60, Audi A4 B7/B8):
Then yes, buy the KESS v2 Clone you linked. It will work perfectly for those.

Summary:
Your workflow logic is perfect. Your hardware choice is wrong for the specific car (Volvo 2017) you want to tune.
Ok so then i understand is there another clone you cvcould suggest for a more universal and newer cars or?

also so most german cars use https://www.alibaba.com/product-det...DARD&priceId=9c0515896ade4119801cb03cbf4e675c ccould I use it on a G80? Or maybe only F11s? Or more what i want to say wahats the newest BMW, WAG cars i could use the tool i linked and if you suggest a better clone then whats the newest car that one could do?
 
Ok so then i understand is there another clone you cvcould suggest for a more universal and newer ca...

Here is the breakdown of what that KESS v2 clone can do, and what you need for newer cars.

1. Can KESS v2 Clone do a BMW G80 (M3)?
Absolutely NOT.
The G80 uses a Bosch MG1 ECU. These are extremely advanced.
  • Cars built after June 2020 have a "locked" processor. Even genuine tools costing $5,000 cannot do them directly. You currently have to physically mail the ECU to a specialized company (FEMto) to unlock it.
  • No clone tool in the world can do a G80 via OBD right now.

2. Can KESS v2 Clone do a BMW F11 (5-Series)?
Generally No (via OBD).
While the software lists the protocols, F-series ECUs (EDC17) usually require a "Virtual Read" (downloading the file from the internet) because they cannot be read directly via OBD.
  • Since it is a clone, it cannot connect to the internet server.
  • To tune an F11 with cheap clone tools, you must use KTAG. You have to take the ECU out of the car and do it on the bench.

3. What is the "Cutoff Year" for the KESS v2 Clone?
Think of the KESS v2 Clone (Red PCB 5.017) as a "Golden Era" tool for cars from 2000 to 2014.
  • VAG (VW/Audi): Works great up to Golf 6 / early Golf 7 (EDC17 engines). Around 2014/2015 they switched to SIMOS18 and newer Delphi ECUs which KESS struggles with.
  • BMW: Works perfectly on E-series (E46, E90, E60). Stops at F-series.

The "Modern" Clone Recommendation

If you want to tune cars from 2015 to ~2021 (like your Volvo, newer BMW F-series, Golf 7/7.5), the KESS v2 is too old.

You should look for a tool called KT200 (or KT200 II) or FoxFlash.
These are the "new generation" of clones.

What KT200/FoxFlash can do that KESS cannot:
  • BMW F-series: Can often do them via OBD or Bench without opening the lid.
  • Volvo (VEA engines): Supports many Denso ECUs via Bench or Boot.
  • VAG Simos 18: Supports Golf 7 GTI/R via OBD.
  • New Bosch ECUs (MD1/MG1): Supports some of these (pre-2020) via Bench.

Summary for you:
If you want to be a "Diesel Head" on cheap older cars (1.9 TDI, BMW 320d E90) -> Buy the KESS v2 / KTAG Kit.
If you want to touch your 2017 Volvo or friends' newer cars -> Buy a KT200 or FoxFlash.
 
but the KT200 can also do all the brand and cars that the kess v2 can?

Yes, generally speaking, the KT200 covers almost everything the KESS v2 does, plus the newer cars.

Think of it this way:
  • KESS v2 is a tool from ~2016. It stops there.
  • KT200 is a tool from ~2022. It includes the old protocols (EDC15, EDC16, EDC17) and adds the new ones (MD1, MG1, DX12, etc.).

The Big Advantage of KT200: "Bench Mode"

This is the biggest reason to choose KT200 over the KESS/KTAG combo.

With KESS/KTAG (Old way):
If OBD fails on a BMW or VW, you have to use KTAG. This means taking the ECU out, heating the glue, prying the metal lid open, and soldering wires to the board. It is risky for a beginner.

With KT200 (New way):
It has a feature called Bench Mode (or Service Mode).
You take the ECU out of the car, but you DO NOT open it. You just plug wires into the connector pins on the outside of the ECU. The tool talks to the ECU as if it were open.
  • It is much safer (no risk of damaging the circuit board).
  • It is much faster.

Summary:
If you have the budget for the KT200 (it is more expensive than KESS), buy the KT200. It will do your friends' old 1.9 TDIs, and it has a much better chance of doing your 2017 Volvo and newer BMWs.
 
Yes, generally speaking, the KT200 covers almost everything the KESS v2 does, plus the newer cars.

Think of it this way:
  • KESS v2 is a tool from ~2016. It stops there.
  • KT200 is a tool from ~2022. It includes the old protocols (EDC15, EDC16, EDC17) and adds the new ones (MD1, MG1, DX12, etc.).

The Big Advantage of KT200: "Bench Mode"

This is the biggest reason to choose KT200 over the KESS/KTAG combo.

With KESS/KTAG (Old way):
If OBD fails on a BMW or VW, you have to use KTAG. This means taking the ECU out, heating the glue, prying the metal lid open, and soldering wires to the board. It is risky for a beginner.

With KT200 (New way):
It has a feature called Bench Mode (or Service Mode).
You take the ECU out of the car, but you DO NOT open it. You just plug wires into the connector pins on the outside of the ECU. The tool talks to the ECU as if it were open.
  • It is much safer (no risk of damaging the circuit board).
  • It is much faster.

Summary:
If you have the budget for the KT200 (it is more expensive than KESS), buy the KT200. It will do your friends' old 1.9 TDIs, and it has a much better chance of doing your 2017 Volvo and newer BMWs.
Ok and its a full version and auto version what is best? Also I do dpf deletes on tractors and stuff could be gopod to know, often out on the field.
 
Ok and its a full version and auto version what is best? Also I do dpf deletes on tractors and stuff...

Full Version vs. Auto Version

Since you mentioned tractors and agricultural machinery, the answer is very simple:

You MUST buy the Full Version.

  • Auto Version: Only supports Cars and Light Trucks (Vans). It will not have the protocols to communicate with John Deere, Fendt, New Holland, Case, etc.
  • Full Version: Supports Car, Truck, Tractor (Agri), Boat (Marine), and Motorbike.

If you buy the Auto version, you will plug it into a tractor and the software will simply not have the button to select that vehicle.



Important Warning for "Field Work"

You mentioned working "out on the field." There is a critical catch with the KT200 (and FoxFlash) that you need to know:

The standard KT200 is an ONLINE tool.

It requires an active internet connection to work. When you click "Read" or "Write," the software connects to a server to verify the liсеnsе and calculate checksums.
  • If you are in the middle of a field with no cell service / no WiFi, the tool will NOT work.
  • You will need to use your phone as a Mobile Hotspot to give your laptop internet access while working on the tractor.

The "Offline Dongle":
Some sellers offer an "Offline Workstation" (a black USB dongle) for the KT200. This allows you to work without internet.
  • If you plan to work in remote areas with zero signal, you should look for a kit that includes the Offline Dongle.
  • However, the Offline mode usually supports fewer cars/protocols than the Online mode.

Summary for your needs

1. Get the KT200 Full Version. (Mandatory for tractors).
2. Check your mobile coverage. If you have 4G/5G in the fields where you work, the standard kit is fine (just hotspot your phone). If you work in dead zones, look for the "Offline Dongle" add-on.
3. Tractor DPFs: Tractors often use industrial ECUs (like Bosch EDC17CV41 or Phoenix). The KT200 is actually very good at these, often much better than Kess v2.

Workflow for Tractors:
It is the same as cars.
Code:
Read (OBD/Bench) -> Edit (DPF Off) -> Write (OBD/Bench)
Just be aware that automated software (like DaVinci) is sometimes less accurate with Tractors than with Cars. You might need to find a professional file service for the first few tractor jobs to ensure the DPF is removed correctly without causing hydraulic/PTO limp modes.
 
Full Version vs. Auto Version

Since you mentioned tractors and agricultural machinery, the answer is very simple:

You MUST buy the Full Version.

  • Auto Version: Only supports Cars and Light Trucks (Vans). It will not have the protocols to communicate with John Deere, Fendt, New Holland, Case, etc.
  • Full Version: Supports Car, Truck, Tractor (Agri), Boat (Marine), and Motorbike.

If you buy the Auto version, you will plug it into a tractor and the software will simply not have the button to select that vehicle.



Important Warning for "Field Work"

You mentioned working "out on the field." There is a critical catch with the KT200 (and FoxFlash) that you need to know:

The standard KT200 is an ONLINE tool.

It requires an active internet connection to work. When you click "Read" or "Write," the software connects to a server to verify the liсеnsе and calculate checksums.
  • If you are in the middle of a field with no cell service / no WiFi, the tool will NOT work.
  • You will need to use your phone as a Mobile Hotspot to give your laptop internet access while working on the tractor.

The "Offline Dongle":
Some sellers offer an "Offline Workstation" (a black USB dongle) for the KT200. This allows you to work without internet.
  • If you plan to work in remote areas with zero signal, you should look for a kit that includes the Offline Dongle.
  • However, the Offline mode usually supports fewer cars/protocols than the Online mode.

Summary for your needs

1. Get the KT200 Full Version. (Mandatory for tractors).
2. Check your mobile coverage. If you have 4G/5G in the fields where you work, the standard kit is fine (just hotspot your phone). If you work in dead zones, look for the "Offline Dongle" add-on.
3. Tractor DPFs: Tractors often use industrial ECUs (like Bosch EDC17CV41 or Phoenix). The KT200 is actually very good at these, often much better than Kess v2.

Workflow for Tractors:
It is the same as cars.
Code:
Read (OBD/Bench) -> Edit (DPF Off) -> Write (OBD/Bench)
Just be aware that automated software (like DaVinci) is sometimes less accurate with Tractors than with Cars. You might need to find a professional file service for the first few tractor jobs to ensure the DPF is removed correctly without causing hydraulic/PTO limp modes.
what about this tool if i only do cars? https://www.ecuhelpshop.com/product...eeprom-micro-via-obd-boot-and-bench-mode.html
 

I would strongly advise against buying that tool (MTM CAN2), especially as a beginner.

Here is why:

1. It is an "Obscure" Tool
In the tuning world, community support is everything.
If you get an error with a KESS v2 or KT200, you can Google it and find 500 forum threads explaining how to fix it.
If you get an error with "MTM CAN2", you will likely find zero results. You will be on your own.

2. It is likely a partial solution
Tools like that are often specific clones for specific tasks (like only VAG cars, or only specific ECUs). It will not have the "Universal" coverage of a KESS or KT200. It almost certainly will not support your 2017 Volvo Denso ECU.

3. The "Database" Problem
When you use DaVinci or buy a file from a tuner, they expect you to use standard tools (Kess, Ktag, Autotuner, Flex, KT200).
Sometimes obscure tools read the file in a weird format (encrypted or scrambled). If you send that file to a tuner, they might say "I can't open this file."

My Final Recommendation

Since you want to do:
  • Your 2017 Volvo (Newer Denso ECU)
  • Friends' BMWs (F-series / G-series)
  • Tractors (Agricultural)
  • Older cars (1.9 TDI)

The KT200 (Full Version) is currently the only budget tool that covers all of these reasonably well.

If you buy the MTM tool, you will likely spend $150 now, realize it doesn't work on the Volvo, and then have to spend $400 on the KT200 anyway. Buy right, buy once.
 
Here is the breakdown of what that KESS v2 clone can do, and what you need for newer cars.

1. Can KESS v2 Clone do a BMW G80 (M3)?
Absolutely NOT.

The G80 uses a Bosch MG1 ECU. These are extremely advanced.
  • Cars built after June 2020 have a "locked" processor. Even genuine tools costing $5,000 cannot do them directly. You currently have to physically mail the ECU to a specialized company (FEMto) to unlock it.
  • No clone tool in the world can do a G80 via OBD right now.

2. Can KESS v2 Clone do a BMW F11 (5-Series)?
Generally No (via OBD).

While the software lists the protocols, F-series ECUs (EDC17) usually require a "Virtual Read" (downloading the file from the internet) because they cannot be read directly via OBD.
  • Since it is a clone, it cannot connect to the internet server.
  • To tune an F11 with cheap clone tools, you must use KTAG. You have to take the ECU out of the car and do it on the bench.

3. What is the "Cutoff Year" for the KESS v2 Clone?
Think of the KESS v2 Clone (Red PCB 5.017) as a "Golden Era" tool for cars from 2000 to 2014.
  • VAG (VW/Audi): Works great up to Golf 6 / early Golf 7 (EDC17 engines). Around 2014/2015 they switched to SIMOS18 and newer Delphi ECUs which KESS struggles with.
  • BMW: Works perfectly on E-series (E46, E90, E60). Stops at F-series.

The "Modern" Clone Recommendation

If you want to tune cars from 2015 to ~2021 (like your Volvo, newer BMW F-series, Golf 7/7.5), the KESS v2 is too old.

You should look for a tool called KT200 (or KT200 II) or FoxFlash.
These are the "new generation" of clones.

What KT200/FoxFlash can do that KESS cannot:
  • BMW F-series: Can often do them via OBD or Bench without opening the lid.
  • Volvo (VEA engines): Supports many Denso ECUs via Bench or Boot.
  • VAG Simos 18: Supports Golf 7 GTI/R via OBD.
  • New Bosch ECUs (MD1/MG1): Supports some of these (pre-2020) via Bench.

Summary for you:
If you want to be a "Diesel Head" on cheap older cars (1.9 TDI, BMW 320d E90) -> Buy the KESS v2 / KTAG Kit.
If you want to touch your 2017 Volvo or friends' newer cars -> Buy a KT200 or FoxFlash.
Why didn't you suggest a cheaper alternative, like a Scanmatik 2 Pro clone with сrаскed PCMflash? It costs just a little bit more than a Kess clone. Here is the support list: https://forum.pcmflash.ru/forum/viewtopic.php?t=12&sid=03500ad1d249cf18e5637ba67ae79c8b
 
Why didn't you suggest a cheaper alternative, like a Scanmatik 2 Pro clone with сrаскed PCMflash? It...

You make a very valid point. The Scanmatik 2 Pro (SM2) Clone + PCMFlash (67-in-1 dongle) is indeed a very popular and powerful combination in the budget tuning world.

However, there is a specific reason I did not recommend it as your *primary* tool, given what you told me about your needs (especially Tractors and Beginner Workflow).

Here is the comparison between KT200 and SM2+PCMFlash for your specific situation:

1. The "Tractor" Problem (Dealbreaker)
You mentioned you work on tractors out in the field.
  • KT200 (Full): Has a massive database for Agricultural machinery (John Deere, Fendt, Case, New Holland, etc.). It is designed to do heavy machinery.
  • PCMFlash (сrаскed): Is primarily a Car/Light Truck tool. It has almost zero support for heavy agricultural tractors. You cannot tune a John Deere or Fendt with a standard PCMFlash dongle.

If you buy the SM2+PCMFlash, you will be able to do the Volvo, but you will be stuck when you try to do a tractor.

2. The "Checksum" Trap (Danger for Beginners)
This is the most critical technical difference for someone starting out.

  • KESS / KT200: These tools almost always calculate the Checksum (CS) automatically when you write the file. You just load the modified file, and the tool fixes the code so the car starts.
  • PCMFlash: Many modules in PCMFlash DO NOT calculate checksums. It expects you (or your tuner) to calculate the checksum in the file *before* you load it.
* If you use DaVinci (which sometimes misses checksums) and then write with PCMFlash (which doesn't check), you will brick the ECU.
* For a beginner, a tool that auto-corrects checksums (like KESS/KT200) is much safer.

3. Wiring Diagrams
  • KT200: The software has built-in pictures showing you exactly where to put the red wire, black wire, and boot wire on the ECU.
  • PCMFlash: The software is just a menu. It does not show you how to connect to the ECU. You have to go find the pinouts yourself on Google or buy a separate app (like EcuPinout).

When is SM2 Pro + PCMFlash better?
If you were only doing modern cars (Toyota, Mazda, VAG, GM) and you knew how to handle checksums manually, the SM2 Pro + PCMFlash is actually faster and more stable than KT200. It is a fantastic tool for specific jobs (like DSG gearboxes or newer Toyotas).

Summary
  • SM2 Pro + PCMFlash: Great for Cars, terrible for Tractors. Harder for beginners (no wiring diagrams, manual checksums).
  • KT200 Full: Good for Cars, Great for Tractors. Easier for beginners (Auto checksums, built-in diagrams).

Since you need to do Tractors, the SM2+PCMFlash is not the right tool for you. Stick with the KT200 Full.
 
But I would need something for never cars and tractors and machines like wheelloaders.

If you need to cover Newer Cars + Tractors + Wheel Loaders (Construction Machinery), the answer remains the same, and it becomes even more clear:

You need the KT200 (Full Version) or FoxFlash.

Here is why this is the only logical choice for your specific mix of vehicles:

1. The "Industrial" Protocols
Wheel loaders (like CAT, JCB, Volvo Construction) and Tractors (John Deere, Fendt) do not speak the same language as a BMW or VW.
  • Cars use standard CAN-Bus (ISO 15765).
  • Heavy Machinery often uses J1939 or proprietary industrial protocols.
Tools like PCMFlash or MPPS are designed for cars. They simply cannot communicate with a Perkins engine in a wheel loader or a Phoenix ECU in a John Deere.

The KT200 Full Version includes specific licenses for "Tractor" and "Industrial/Truck". It knows how to talk to:
  • Bosch EDC17CV41 / CV42 (Used in almost all modern tractors/trucks).
  • Perkins / CAT ECUs (Used in wheel loaders and excavators).
  • Phoenix L14/L21/L33 (Used in John Deere).
  • TRW EMS2 (Used in Volvo Construction/Trucks).

2. 12V vs 24V Capability
Cars are 12V.
Tractors and Wheel Loaders are often 24V.

The KT200 hardware is designed to handle 24V systems (via OBD) and comes with a power supply that can handle bench work for these heavy ECUs.
Cheap car-only tools often fry if you plug them into a 24V machine.

3. The "Bench Box" for Machinery
On wheel loaders, the OBD port is often hidden, damaged, or non-standard (Deutch 9-pin round connector, etc.).
With the KT200, you can just pull the ECU out of the loader (usually easy access on the side of the engine), take it to your van, and wire it up on the Bench.
Code:
Example Workflow for a Wheel Loader (e.g., JCB with Kohler engine):
1. Remove ECU.
2. Open KT200 Software -> Select Driver -> Bench Mode.
3. Look at the wiring diagram in the software.
4. Connect Red, Black, CAN-H, CAN-L wires to the ECU pins.
5. Read -> DPF Off -> Write.

Summary Recommendation

Do not buy the Scanmatik/PCMFlash for this. It will fail on the Wheel Loaders.
Do not buy the KESS v2 for this. It is too old for the 2017 Volvo and newer machinery.

Buy the KT200 II (Full Version).
It is the "Swiss Army Knife" that covers the 2017 Volvo (Car) AND the John Deere (Tractor) AND the CAT/JCB (Wheel Loader).

Note: When buying, double-check the description says "Full Version" or "Master Version" including "Tractor/Marine". The cheaper "Auto" version does not have the heavy machinery protocols.
 
You make a very valid point. The Scanmatik 2 Pro (SM2) Clone + PCMFlash (67-in-1 dongle) is indeed a very popular and powerful combination in the budget tuning world.

However, there is a specific reason I did not recommend it as your *primary* tool, given what you told me about your needs (especially Tractors and Beginner Workflow).

Here is the comparison between KT200 and SM2+PCMFlash for your specific situation:

1. The "Tractor" Problem (Dealbreaker)
You mentioned you work on tractors out in the field.
  • KT200 (Full): Has a massive database for Agricultural machinery (John Deere, Fendt, Case, New Holland, etc.). It is designed to do heavy machinery.
  • PCMFlash (сrаскed): Is primarily a Car/Light Truck tool. It has almost zero support for heavy agricultural tractors. You cannot tune a John Deere or Fendt with a standard PCMFlash dongle.

If you buy the SM2+PCMFlash, you will be able to do the Volvo, but you will be stuck when you try to do a tractor.

2. The "Checksum" Trap (Danger for Beginners)
This is the most critical technical difference for someone starting out.

  • KESS / KT200: These tools almost always calculate the Checksum (CS) automatically when you write the file. You just load the modified file, and the tool fixes the code so the car starts.
  • PCMFlash: Many modules in PCMFlash DO NOT calculate checksums. It expects you (or your tuner) to calculate the checksum in the file *before* you load it.
* If you use DaVinci (which sometimes misses checksums) and then write with PCMFlash (which doesn't check), you will brick the ECU.
* For a beginner, a tool that auto-corrects checksums (like KESS/KT200) is much safer.

3. Wiring Diagrams
  • KT200: The software has built-in pictures showing you exactly where to put the red wire, black wire, and boot wire on the ECU.
  • PCMFlash: The software is just a menu. It does not show you how to connect to the ECU. You have to go find the pinouts yourself on Google or buy a separate app (like EcuPinout).

When is SM2 Pro + PCMFlash better?
If you were only doing modern cars (Toyota, Mazda, VAG, GM) and you knew how to handle checksums manually, the SM2 Pro + PCMFlash is actually faster and more stable than KT200. It is a fantastic tool for specific jobs (like DSG gearboxes or newer Toyotas).

Summary
  • SM2 Pro + PCMFlash: Great for Cars, terrible for Tractors. Harder for beginners (no wiring diagrams, manual checksums).
  • KT200 Full: Good for Cars, Great for Tractors. Easier for beginners (Auto checksums, built-in diagrams).

Since you need to do Tractors, the SM2+PCMFlash is not the right tool for you. Stick with the KT200 Full.
I think you should buy it together with the KT200, considering the price difference between them.
 
I think you should buy it together with the KT200, considering the price difference between them.

That is actually the smartest move you can make. If you can afford to buy both, you will have the Ultimate Budget Combo.

You are absolutely right—considering the Scanmatik 2 Pro (SM2) clone is relatively cheap, adding it to your arsenal solves the weaknesses of the KT200.

Here is why owning BOTH is the perfect setup for you:

  • Redundancy (The "Plan B"):
    Cloned tools are not 100% perfect. Sometimes the KT200 server is down, or it just refuses to read a specific BMW ECU. Having the SM2 + PCMFlash ready means you have a backup. If one fails, the other usually works.
  • The "Specialties" Split:
    • Use KT200 for: Tractors, Wheel Loaders, Trucks, Old cars (EDC15/16), and full system backups (Cloning).
    • Use SM2 + PCMFlash for: Modern Asian cars (Toyota, Lexus, Mazda), Ford, and VAG DSG gearboxes. PCMFlash is generally faster and safer via OBD for these specific brands than KT200.
  • The Hidden Bonus: Diagnostics (J2534)
    This is huge for your field work. The Scanmatik 2 Pro is a J2534 Pass-Thru device.
    This means you can use it with OEM Diagnostic software. You can install:
    • ODIS (for VW/Audi diagnostics)
    • Techstream (for Toyota)
    • Xentry Passthru (for Mercedes)
    • Forscan (for Ford/Mazda)
    So, for the price of the SM2, you are not just getting a tuning tool; you are getting a dealer-level diagnostic scanner for your laptop.

Summary:
Buy the KT200 Full as your main tool for heavy machinery and broad coverage.
Buy the SM2 Pro + PCMFlash (67 in 1) as your specialist tool for modern cars and diagnostics.

With those two tools, you will cover 95% of what comes your way for a fraction of the price of one original tool.
 
Back