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Augmented Reality To Help Mechanics Fix Vehicles

kkleiner writes "ARMAR, or Augmented Reality for Maintenance and Repair, is a head mounted display unit that provides graphic overlays to assist you in making repairs. An Android phone provides an interface to control the graphics you view during the process. Published in IEEE, and recently tested with the United States Marine Corps on an armored turret, ARMAR can cut maintenance times in half by guiding users to the damaged area and displaying 3D animations to demonstrate the appropriate tools and techniques."

2 of 81 comments (clear)

  1. On the down side by sehlat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We are very likely to see people like the major auto manufacturers providing this sort of
    thing ONLY to their authorized dealers, and possibly trying to claim that any repair information
    of any kind is copyrighted, just like they've done with the diagnostic codes on the black boxes.

  2. Another dealer profit center. by WhatDoIKnow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I can't comment on military applications, but I do have 30 years experience in mobile equipment and vehicle maintenance and fleet management. Despite the OBD 2, the major vehicle producers are increasingly requiring proprietary information and specialized tools for what could be simple routine repairs and maintenance. The described system could be a boon to technicians but my cynical view is that it will just be turned into another income source for vehicle manufacturers and dealer service departments. On many cars now you can't even change a coolant hose without a substantial investment in a "hose fitting disconnect kit", let alone accessing any non-generic DTCs from OBD2 or CAN. And of course Ford, Honda, GM, Toyota etc. are all different.