Hi gm,
They will check them at those auto parts stores on those models. But the 94/95 which is what mine is, is a kind of "bastardized" plug. It is a real ODB II plug but you cannot read codes with an ODB II scanner. I read somewhere that you could with an adapter and a guy at Advance Auto told me they actually had an adapter for the scanner but they were told to pull the adapter. Reason unknown.
On mine I always use pins 4 & 12 per the FSM.
Paul
The 94s and 95s do not have a "bastardized" plug. The 16-pin DLC is the same on those cars as was used on the "full" OBDII 96-09 Corvettes and all other GM cars which have 16-pin connectors.
The difference is in the ECM calibration itself. Read my above post which describes GM's "early roll-out" of OBDII. I'll add: there were three other platforms (C, H, U) in 94 and another five platforms (G, J, F, G, S/T-truck) in 95 that were part of this program. Another thing I should add about the early-rollout was that, when any of the OBDII codes would set, they would not turn on the check engine light. The system was set-up that way because all GM wanted was to gain some field experience with OBDII. What it didn't want was customers coming in with MILs on caused by a fluke or a malfunction in the then-under-development OBDII. On a 94 or 95, if the MIL came on, it was because a two-digit code stored by the OBD system turned on the light. When a customer came in for service with the light on, dealers were instructed to read any of the OBDII codes where were also set and pass the info on to GM. That gave GM the field experience they needed. The early-roll out was a great idea and gave GM needed OBDII diagnostics experience as much as two years ahead of the 1996 implementation deadline that some other manufacturers might have lacked.
The "code reader" sold by Harbor Freight may not be compatible with a 94 system and, even if it is, it will only read the codes held in the memory of the partial-OBDII diagnostics. It will not read the codes in the full OBD section of memory and those are the codes which turn on the MIL.
You may be able to use some other consumer scan testers which support 81-93 ECMs by adding a 12-pin-to-16 pin adapter. I do not know where you can obtain such a device, but I'm sure they exist. I'd check with the manufacturer of the scanner. Also, some consumer scanners come with, or have available as an option, a special cable for OBD systems having 16-pin connectors. In addition, there are some software-based testers (such as "EASE") which come with such cables.
Most professional-level scanners (TECH1A, TECH 2, Mastertech, etc) either will have such an adapter or allow you to connect directly to the 16-pin connector yet read OBD codes...as well as the OBDII codes that might be in memory of those systems.