ADAS Calibration in Penn Yan, NY
ADAS (Advanced Driver Assistance Systems) — lane-keep assist, automatic emergency braking, adaptive cruise — rely on a camera and sensors that are usually aimed through the windshield. Any time that glass is replaced (or the camera is disturbed), calibration in Penn Yan re-aims the system so those safety features react correctly.
Auto glass shops in Penn Yan
No shops have specifically listed adas calibration in Penn Yan yet — these Penn Yanauto glass shops can tell you if they offer it. Use "Get a quote" to ask.
Village Auto Works
Penn Yan, NY
Auto glass and windshield services in Penn Yan, New York.
Is this your business? Claim this listing
Marble's Glass Service
Penn Yan, NY
Auto glass and windshield services in Penn Yan, New York.
Is this your business? Claim this listing
When you need adas calibration
- •After a windshield replacement on a vehicle with a forward-facing camera
- •After a front-end collision, suspension or alignment work, or camera removal
- •When dashboard warnings appear for lane-departure, collision, or cruise systems
- •If lane-keep or emergency braking starts behaving erratically
ADAS Calibration cost in Penn Yan
Typical Penn Yan range
$150–$400
Static calibration (in-shop targets) and dynamic calibration (a road drive) are sometimes both required. It's frequently bundled with a windshield replacement.
ADAS Calibration FAQs — Penn Yan
Why does a new windshield require ADAS calibration?
The safety camera looks through the glass from a precise position. Even a tiny change from a new windshield can throw off where the system thinks the road and other cars are — calibration re-aims it so automatic braking and lane-keep work as designed.
Static vs. dynamic calibration — what's the difference?
Static uses fixed targets in the shop; dynamic uses a road drive at set speeds. Your vehicle's make and model dictate which (or both) are needed. A Penn Yan shop with the right equipment will know your requirement.
Is calibration really necessary, or can I skip it?
Skipping it leaves your driver-assist features mis-aimed — they may brake late or read lanes wrong. It's a genuine safety step, not an upsell, on any camera-equipped vehicle.