Automotive Service Technician
What an Automotive Service Technician Does
Two important aspects of the automotive technical industry are repair and diagnostics. Once a car engine suddenly stops running, a problem has obviously occurred. To determine the problem is one task, to do a repair is another. Only one person can perform these tasks though, and this job calls for an automotive service technician.
An automotive service technician tends to focus more on the vehicle's electrical parts and other high-tech problems including computer-based technology. Before, an automotive service technician may have dealt only with repairing broken spark plugs and adjusting carburetors; nowadays they may construct complex electrical systems and computer applications in order to make a vehicles more efficient as well as more sophisticated.
An automotive service technician may act not only as a car's doctor and electrical specialist, but as a detective as well. They may listen to the statements of car owners regarding what became of their cars, and it is up to the automotive service technician to discover the cause of the problem.
The skills of an automotive service technician tend to increasing in demand in vehicle companies because vehicles are using more computer-based systems aided by electrical technology. Unlike auto mechanics who deal with major repair of vehicles such as tire change and hands-on engine trouble, an automotive service technician may carry the responsibility of taking care of the vehicle's electrical devices and as well as the electronic equipment mechanics used in resolving engine problems. Like an auto mechanic, an automotive service technician may also perform test drives in order to ensure that they have fixed the vehicle's broken electrical components properly.



