The VW Golf on the driveway in Dunstable had a new wheel speed sensor fitted on the offside rear two weeks before I arrived. The owner had watched a YouTube video, ordered the part, fitted it himself, and the ABS light had come back on within a day. He was not the first person to call me from exactly that position.
I watch the videos that drive this. Not all of them, but enough to understand what people are being told and where the guidance falls short of the real job. The gap is significant. It shows up on driveways like the one in Dunstable.
The most common error across the high-view ABS videos is treating a fault code as confirmation of a failed part. A code is not confirmation of anything. It is the system's best estimate of where something went wrong, based on the signals it could read from where it was sitting. Fitting the part named in the code without checking live data is diagnostic guesswork with a receipt attached.
The Golf had a perfectly functional new wheel speed sensor fitted into a connector that had corroded through. I pulled the connector and the terminals inside were already showing the same oxidation that had killed the signal in the first place. The sensor the owner bought was not the problem. The connector it plugged into was.
The video he had watched showed the fault code, named the sensor, and walked through the replacement process. It was well-made, clear, and genuinely useful if your connector is clean. No mention of inspecting the terminal condition before fitting the new sensor. That inspection is what would have saved him the part cost.
The second problem is the diagnostic tools these videos recommend. A basic OBD reader connected to most cars will pull engine codes and nothing else. It will not access the ABS module and will not pull live wheel speed data. The marginal signal dropout that tells you whether the fault is in the sensor, the connector, or somewhere upstream is completely invisible to it.

Several of the most-viewed videos use the cheap Bluetooth dongles you can buy for twelve pounds. They look like diagnostic tools. They are not diagnostic tools. They are data readers for engine management systems, and treating them as ABS diagnostic equipment is something I have had to explain on too many driveways.
The third thing these videos consistently get wrong is the pump. When an ABS pump is flagged in a fault code, a significant number of videos recommend replacing it. In most cases I see on British cars, the pump is not the fault. The fault is usually in what the pump is trying to work through.
The pump gets implicated because it shares a circuit with the hydraulic control valves, and a blocked or sticking valve produces a fault the system attributes to the pump. The valve is a fraction of the pump's cost. Replacing the pump when the valve is the issue is exactly what a proper live data check prevents. I have seen it charged as a pump replacement at dealerships when the actual fix was a valve.
The Golf in Dunstable needed a connector clean, fresh terminal grease, and the sensor reseated correctly into a clean housing. The sensor the owner had already bought and fitted was fine, so we used it. The part cost he had already spent was not recoverable, and I told him that. What would have saved it was the live data step before the order went in.
The connector terminal inspection takes thirty seconds.
I understand why these videos get millions of views. ABS warning lights worry people, garages quote prices that feel alarming, and the idea of fixing it yourself with a twenty-pound part and a tool from Amazon is genuinely appealing. That appeal is real, and I am not dismissing it. What I am saying is that the information those videos give you is incomplete in the specific place where incomplete information costs money.
The connector terminal on that Golf was dark and oxidised, the kind of corrosion that takes two years on a car that lives near a gritted road. You can smell it when you get close. No video at any view count told that owner to look at it before ordering the part. That detail does not make a satisfying watch, but it is the only detail that would have saved him the money.

Jimmy O’Riley is a UK-based mobile mechanic and automotive diagnostic specialist operating out of Bedfordshire, England. He founded O’Rileys Autos in 2011 with a focus on bringing professional vehicle repairs directly to customers at their homes and workplaces.
With over a decade of hands-on experience, Jimmy specializes in ABS diagnostics, brake system repairs, diesel emissions faults, and DPF cleaning. He is recognized across the UK and Ireland as one of the leading specialists in vehicle braking and emissions systems, earning the title “The DPF King” from his growing online audience.
Jimmy documents real-world automotive repairs through his YouTube channel, which has accumulated over 97,000 subscribers and nearly 2,000 published repair videos. His content covers ABS fault diagnosis, wheel speed sensor testing, brake module replacement, and roadside repair procedures across a wide range of vehicle makes and models.
He is active on YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook under O’Rileys Autos.
