Basically title. Some maintenance tasks for my vehicle (like replacing various coolants, the engine air filter, and brake fluid) are prescribed on a compound interval of, e.g., every 72k miles or 4 years, whichever comes first. Is it possible to create these kinds of maintenance schedules in Traccar?
AFAICT, Traccar’s maintenance schedules are stateless—that is, there’s no way to log when the actual maintenance was performed. If you set a reminder to change your oil every 3k mi and it goes off at 35k mi, but then you don’t actually get around to changing it until 800 mi later, the next reminder will still come at 38k mi (bad) rather than 38.8k (good).
(Am I understanding correctly? I haven’t actually tried it yet; that’s just the understanding I’ve pieced together based on playing around in the app.)
At first, I had hoped I could cobble something together with computed attributes, but if the maintenance model is truly stateless, then I think that’s kind of a show-stopper.
Currently not possible. And yes, it is stateless.
I intercepted start and stop events and wrote them to my base. On the basis of them, you can calculate engine hours and mileage
Basically title. Some maintenance tasks for my vehicle (like replacing various coolants, the engine air filter, and brake fluid) are prescribed on a compound interval of, e.g., every 72k miles or 4 years, whichever comes first. Is it possible to create these kinds of maintenance schedules in Traccar?
AFAICT, Traccar’s maintenance schedules are stateless—that is, there’s no way to log when the actual maintenance was performed. If you set a reminder to change your oil every 3k mi and it goes off at 35k mi, but then you don’t actually get around to changing it until 800 mi later, the next reminder will still come at 38k mi (bad) rather than 38.8k (good).
(Am I understanding correctly? I haven’t actually tried it yet; that’s just the understanding I’ve pieced together based on playing around in the app.)
At first, I had hoped I could cobble something together with computed attributes, but if the maintenance model is truly stateless, then I think that’s kind of a show-stopper.