Have you ever found yourself frustrated with the traditional car appraisal process? Waiting for an appraiser to conduct a visual inspection of your vehicle can be time-consuming, and the process is often influenced by subjective factors that can affect the vehicle’s valuation.
Regular maintenance on tires is just as important as changing your engine oil. Unlike your oil level, unfortunately, there’s no sensor letting you know when a tire’s tread depth is getting too low. UVeye equipped dealerships can help keep track of scheduled maintenance, eliminating the guesswork.
Tire maintenance is one of the easiest items to address when managing a fleet, yet it’s one of the most overlooked. Knowing when to take care of tires can save you both time and money.
Any time a vehicle is down means lost revenues or missed delivery promises. Fleet Managers currently rely on visual checks, historical repairs, and unreliable sensor data resulting in a reactive maintenance strategy rather than a predictive one.
Automated vehicle inspection systems at dealerships and service garages can help car owners avoid accidents and save lives by detecting hard-to-find tire and underbody problems.
Houston police found a stash of stolen car parts worth in excess of $14,000. Comprised mainly of catalytic converters, the cache had been pilfered from unsuspecting motorists over an unknown period of time.
In the last couple of years, many transport ministries around the world have decided to privatize this inspection process and potentially automate it as well, to increase transparency with vehicle owners and support efficiency of the testing facility.
Learn why building consistency into the inspection process can improve customer trust, enhance used car appraisal accuracy and ensure higher profitability.
Shouldn’t the technologies we use to inspect and repair vehicles advance as fast as vehicles themselves?
The owner of a nearly new Jaguar I-Pace electric car near Oslo, Norway received a shocking report during a vehicle inspection. In what was a routine service visit, a small hole was discovered in the underside of the owner’s all-electric Jaguar SUV.