ADAS Collision Repair for Modern, Sensor-Equipped Vehicles

Today’s vehicles rely on cameras, radar, parking sensors, blind-spot monitors, and advanced driver-assistance systems. At The Great Auto Body in Santa Clara, we look beyond the visible damage to help protect your vehicle’s safety systems, finish quality, and long-term value.

Why ADAS Matters

Modern bumpers, mirrors, grilles, windshields, and body panels often house or interact with sensitive driver-assistance technology. Even when the damage looks cosmetic, the repair may require careful inspection, documentation, part alignment, or calibration coordination.

The Great Auto Body takes a sensor-aware approach so your repair is planned around the vehicle, not just the visible dent.

Automotive diagnostic tablet screen showing ADAS calibration settings with options for post-scan, wheel alignment, windshield repair, and vehicle profile. The display includes calibration frame rough adjustment with indicators for distance, frame angle, and offset, alongside navigation buttons at the bottom.

FAQ Section

What does ADAS mean?

ADAS stands for Advanced Driver Assistance Systems. These systems can include cameras, radar, parking sensors, blind-spot monitoring, lane-assist features, and collision-warning systems.

Can bumper damage affect ADAS sensors?

Yes. Many modern vehicles have sensors, brackets, wiring, or radar-related components in or behind the bumper area.

Does every collision repair require calibration?

Not every repair requires calibration, but many repairs require inspection or calibration consideration depending on the damage location and vehicle systems involved.

Do you perform OEM procedure reviews?

We advocate for OEM procedures and parts when applicable and help document the need for proper repair steps during the claim or supplement process.

Should I get my vehicle checked if there are no warning lights?

Yes. Some sensor-related issues may not trigger a dashboard warning immediately. If the impact was near bumpers, mirrors, grilles, cameras, or radar areas, the vehicle should be reviewed.