On the advice of a friend, we went ahead and tested for any shorts in the car.
The method was to make sure everything was off, doors shut and dome lights off, pulled the plug on the hood light, unplugged the cd changer and pulled the fuses on the amp to be sure, and then took off the negative terminal and poked a multimeter between the battery post and the black wires.
Theoretically, with nothing on, there should be no power drawn. This test makes sense to me.
Instead, it read near the full voltage of the battery (12.6_ across the battery's terminals, 12.5_ being drawn across the negative terminal).
On my insistence we also set it for amperage, and it read .02 Hey, at least it's not 1000 amps being drawn!
The other symptom is that whenever I undo the negative terminal, and hook it back up to the battery, it sparks just as it makes contact.
We measured voltage then, too: Just after sparking, we pulled the cable away again with the multimeter still probing.
It read, this time, ~8 volts and over the course of a few seconds, climbed its way back to 12.5 volts.
Next step, we took apart the clamp-on battery terminal that I had installed, and tested each of the cables: my added ground for my amplifier, the starter motor's ground, the direct ground to the chassis, and some smaller ground wire whose purpose I don't know. Hooked up, there was a noise from that relay/fuse box under the hood on the driver's side.
They all had the same voltage, and all sparked when you first touched them to the battery.
This seems to indicate that there's a short to ground somewhere, since they all share the same common ground: not that, for example, my amplifier ground cable is simply chaffed.
I'll also add that the sparking has always been present since I have owned this car, several months now: which is a relief in that I didn't necessarily create a short in my fumbling first audio installation, but worrisome, in that I knew what I touched when I did the audio install and could start looking there.
I recollect that last week, when I replaced my tailgate motor, I found a short where the access panels had self-tapping screws, one of which had cut into a cord there and smoked as I unscrewed it. I soldered and wrapped the damaged wire. I guess I'm looking for something else like that?
Lastly, we started pulling fuses from the box under the steering wheel and watched the voltmeter like hawks. Nothing cut off the short; it wasn't anything controlled by one of those fuses.
SO.
First question, is 12.5 volts and .02 amps a problematic parasitic drain, or do people live with little faults like that all the time?
I haven't killed the battery with it yet: just once when I know I left the lights on, and a second time when the battery was completely unhooked, so I figured the battery was on its way out.
Second question; if a .02 amp, full voltage short is not a normal thing, and might even be a fire risk: from my above symptoms, where might it be? Not in the wires controlled by the fuse box, something that goes to the common ground, and, which after sparking, takes a couple seconds or so to build back to full battery voltage?
I have had, 3 times, the engine quietly stall several seconds after what seemed like a normal ignition. Never on the highway, only very soon after ignition. Check engine and battery light come on, I take the key out, put it back in, start the car up, and it will again start up fine and keep running.
Just got an obdI reader and haven't read the manual yet; but is there an electrical component possibly related to my short?
thanks!!!
-Bernard
The method was to make sure everything was off, doors shut and dome lights off, pulled the plug on the hood light, unplugged the cd changer and pulled the fuses on the amp to be sure, and then took off the negative terminal and poked a multimeter between the battery post and the black wires.
Theoretically, with nothing on, there should be no power drawn. This test makes sense to me.
Instead, it read near the full voltage of the battery (12.6_ across the battery's terminals, 12.5_ being drawn across the negative terminal).
On my insistence we also set it for amperage, and it read .02 Hey, at least it's not 1000 amps being drawn!
The other symptom is that whenever I undo the negative terminal, and hook it back up to the battery, it sparks just as it makes contact.
We measured voltage then, too: Just after sparking, we pulled the cable away again with the multimeter still probing.
It read, this time, ~8 volts and over the course of a few seconds, climbed its way back to 12.5 volts.
Next step, we took apart the clamp-on battery terminal that I had installed, and tested each of the cables: my added ground for my amplifier, the starter motor's ground, the direct ground to the chassis, and some smaller ground wire whose purpose I don't know. Hooked up, there was a noise from that relay/fuse box under the hood on the driver's side.
They all had the same voltage, and all sparked when you first touched them to the battery.
This seems to indicate that there's a short to ground somewhere, since they all share the same common ground: not that, for example, my amplifier ground cable is simply chaffed.
I'll also add that the sparking has always been present since I have owned this car, several months now: which is a relief in that I didn't necessarily create a short in my fumbling first audio installation, but worrisome, in that I knew what I touched when I did the audio install and could start looking there.
I recollect that last week, when I replaced my tailgate motor, I found a short where the access panels had self-tapping screws, one of which had cut into a cord there and smoked as I unscrewed it. I soldered and wrapped the damaged wire. I guess I'm looking for something else like that?
Lastly, we started pulling fuses from the box under the steering wheel and watched the voltmeter like hawks. Nothing cut off the short; it wasn't anything controlled by one of those fuses.
SO.
First question, is 12.5 volts and .02 amps a problematic parasitic drain, or do people live with little faults like that all the time?
I haven't killed the battery with it yet: just once when I know I left the lights on, and a second time when the battery was completely unhooked, so I figured the battery was on its way out.
Second question; if a .02 amp, full voltage short is not a normal thing, and might even be a fire risk: from my above symptoms, where might it be? Not in the wires controlled by the fuse box, something that goes to the common ground, and, which after sparking, takes a couple seconds or so to build back to full battery voltage?
I have had, 3 times, the engine quietly stall several seconds after what seemed like a normal ignition. Never on the highway, only very soon after ignition. Check engine and battery light come on, I take the key out, put it back in, start the car up, and it will again start up fine and keep running.
Just got an obdI reader and haven't read the manual yet; but is there an electrical component possibly related to my short?
thanks!!!
-Bernard
Comment