ADAS Calibration in Elkhorn, WI
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 Elkhorn re-aims the system so those safety features react correctly.
Auto glass shops in Elkhorn
No shops have specifically listed adas calibration in Elkhorn yet — these Elkhornauto glass shops can tell you if they offer it. Use "Get a quote" to ask.
Steve's Windshields and Glass
Elkhorn, WI
Auto glass and windshield services in Elkhorn, Wisconsin.
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American Glass and Window
Elkhorn, WI
Auto glass and windshield services in Elkhorn, Wisconsin.
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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 Elkhorn
Typical Elkhorn 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 — Elkhorn
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 Elkhorn 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.