Sponsored

Does OBD or Forscan show Cabin temp?

MrLoganRoss

Well-known member
First Name
Logan
Joined
Jul 28, 2024
Threads
21
Messages
177
Reaction score
122
Location
Seattle Washington
Vehicles
'23.5 MachE GTPE & '24 Lightning Lariat
I am wondering whether any of the tools we have access to will show us the cabin temp, which presumably would influence the hvac system.

then of course, the question is whether one can program in an offset or calibration.

Thanks.
Sponsored

 

Runaway Tractor

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 25, 2024
Threads
13
Messages
484
Reaction score
778
Location
USA
Vehicles
Yes
I am wondering whether any of the tools we have access to will show us the cabin temp, which presumably would influence the hvac system.

then of course, the question is whether one can program in an offset or calibration.

Thanks.
Yes it does. There are a few interior and exterior temperature sensors that are readable. No you can't change them. Unsure why you'd want to??
 
OP
OP
MrLoganRoss

MrLoganRoss

Well-known member
First Name
Logan
Joined
Jul 28, 2024
Threads
21
Messages
177
Reaction score
122
Location
Seattle Washington
Vehicles
'23.5 MachE GTPE & '24 Lightning Lariat
I have some other threads where I discuss working through the hvac experience vs what the car offers (which is different than my Mache).
They just replaced the blower motor. Heating is better. I also just changed the cabin air filter.

The issue seems to be more about when it decides to heat (especially on Auto) vs whether the car heater is working. I am hoping to compare OBD to a legitimate scientific thermometer I bring into the cabin.
 

Firn

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 26, 2024
Threads
12
Messages
338
Reaction score
345
Location
USA
Vehicles
23 Pro ER
Car Scanner user here and was just monitoring this actually.

I'm using Interior Temp however don't expect it to read the "interior" temp, it seems more like raw sensor data.

What are you trying to do with an offset.

To be clear, "interior" temp can get pretty squishy. What a sensor measures the temp to be, and what we feel, are frequently different. Mostly due to things like sensor location and it's ability to measure what we are feeling. If you notice, there is no interior temp sensor hanging down from the ceiling between the front two seats, about the only place to get a proper temp.
 

Sponsored
OP
OP
MrLoganRoss

MrLoganRoss

Well-known member
First Name
Logan
Joined
Jul 28, 2024
Threads
21
Messages
177
Reaction score
122
Location
Seattle Washington
Vehicles
'23.5 MachE GTPE & '24 Lightning Lariat
When you say raw data, what do you mean? Thx.
 

astrand1

Well-known member
First Name
Alex
Joined
Dec 16, 2021
Threads
6
Messages
239
Reaction score
212
Location
Michigan
Vehicles
2023 Ford F150 Lightning lariat ER
Occupation
Studio truck driver

TaxmanHog

Moderator
Moderator
First Name
Noel
Joined
Jan 19, 2022
Threads
174
Messages
12,660
Reaction score
13,378
Location
SE. Mass.
Vehicles
2022 Lightning Lariat-ER & 2024 HD Road Glide CVO-ST
Occupation
Retired
Yep. Tend to need to set the temp to at least 78
I've found 78° setting on the control creates a comfort level for our needs, can't say that it's accurate or not based on what the HVAC system is measuring as an input to cycle the PTC or VHP system to generate more heat.
 

Firn

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 26, 2024
Threads
12
Messages
338
Reaction score
345
Location
USA
Vehicles
23 Pro ER
When you say raw data, what do you mean? Thx.
There is a sensor to measure the interior temp, but where is it? It's not near the driver, so how does it know what the driver is feeling?

Generally there tends to be a sensor, or sensors, in the cabin. And from those sensors they determine what the driver is feeling.

When I say "raw" sensor values, it's what the sensor is reading but before any calculation to determine what the driver is feeling. Those calculations could be from the truck sitting in the sun for a few hours and the sensor is heat soaked. Or it could be in the cold, and the truck knows it's slow to update so it considers the BTUs it has been dumping into the cabin. Etc.

It could be a sensor on top of the dash. Or one in the air duct. Or in the center console.

Long story short, most every manufacture uses one or more sensors, but also applies various calculations or estimates on top of the sensor data.
 

Sponsored
OP
OP
MrLoganRoss

MrLoganRoss

Well-known member
First Name
Logan
Joined
Jul 28, 2024
Threads
21
Messages
177
Reaction score
122
Location
Seattle Washington
Vehicles
'23.5 MachE GTPE & '24 Lightning Lariat
So it’s obviously not right near the driver’s head, but knowing how it reacts relative to how I feel lets me correlate. It’s in a spot where closer to the vents than I am.

I tracked it on the way home from a restaurant, including how it changes when I change the temp. It’s clear that at a certain point the system thinks it’s hotter than it is.

however, the info has been helpful and over the next few weeks I will test my ability to quickly adjust temp in a way that keeps me comfortable for the entire drive (harder as most of my drives are 20 minutes or less).

as a side note, my battery is at 100% health after being in service for 9 months.
 

mrau

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 2, 2024
Threads
2
Messages
286
Reaction score
373
Location
Michigan
Vehicles
23 Lariat⚡ER
FYI, the outside temp sensor is under the passenger side mirror. Not sure where cabin sensor is, but may look similar.


Ford F-150 Lightning Does OBD or Forscan show Cabin temp? IMG_3114
 
OP
OP
MrLoganRoss

MrLoganRoss

Well-known member
First Name
Logan
Joined
Jul 28, 2024
Threads
21
Messages
177
Reaction score
122
Location
Seattle Washington
Vehicles
'23.5 MachE GTPE & '24 Lightning Lariat
Ok, with access to Car Scanner and a decent scientific thermometer, and testing with an outdoor temp of 48 degrees, my test shows that the car’s interior temp deviates from the actual temp by being between 2 degrees and 4. 5 degrees higher (let’s call it an average of of 3-3.5 degrees).

That explains why I generally need to set the temp to 75 degrees.

To be fair, I think the scientific thermometer reacts slowly and so I want to rerun the test with a fast acting thermometer.

The goal is really just to recalibrate my thinking since it is taking a little more work to maintain temp. For example, when the car temp is 73, but inside the car is really 69, you feel the cold, yet the car is saying warm enough and stops heating.

when it heats it’s fine. The issue is getting it to heat consistently.

Ford F-150 Lightning Does OBD or Forscan show Cabin temp? IMG_5359
Sponsored

 
 





Top