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Checking battery drain on car with lots of electrics
longwalks1
Posts: 3,850 Forumite
in Motoring
As in my other thread currently running, having a battery drain issue with my Range Rover TD6. I want to measure to see if theres any drain once its turned off, I understand you need to leave it 15 minutes for everything to shut down and go to sleep (the ECU's etc), then what would I do to test for any drain?
Someone at work suggested a clamp meter around the negative cable from the battery, but i did read it may not read such a small drain (mA) on a car.
Any ideas please people?
Someone at work suggested a clamp meter around the negative cable from the battery, but i did read it may not read such a small drain (mA) on a car.
Any ideas please people?
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Comments
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You need a multimeter to measure the current drawn from the battery. Take off the positive terminal, put the red probe on the batter and then the negative probe on the battery terminal/wire that is no longer connected. The meter will measure the current being drawn through it by the car.
Be warned though, there are several issues with this:
Intermittently touching the probes on the contacts might screw things over so you need firm solid contact
You need to understand the difference between amps, milliamps, microamps etc to know what it's drawing
You need to know what it SHOULD be drawing to know if its normal or not - eg by measuring another car or being told by the manufacturer.
Your best bet might be to get a battery load test done instead to see if the battery condition is good.0 -
If the battery is good then you already know you have a power drain so carrying out the above procedure is only going to confirm what you already know.
I suggest a current tester which will identify the circuit which is faulty and therefore at least move you closer to fixing the problem
http://www.maplin.co.uk/automotive-current-tester-217879You have been reading.....another magnificent post by garethgas :beer:0 -
Meh, turn car off, access the fuse box, start from the top, pull out a fuse, insert multimeter (in current mode) into the fuse terminals and measure current, made a note, remove meter, replace fuse, rinse/repeat until all have been tested.
In all honesty though, it's probably something daft like the boot or glove box light not turning off.“I may not agree with you, but I will defend to the death your right to make an a** of yourself.”
<><><><><><><><><<><><><><><><><><><><><><> Don't forget to like and subscribe \/ \/ \/0 -
Strider590 wrote: »Meh, turn car off, access the fuse box, start from the top, pull out a fuse, insert multimeter (in current mode) into the fuse terminals and measure current, made a note, remove meter, replace fuse, rinse/repeat until all have been tested.
In all honesty though, it's probably something daft like the boot or glove box light not turning off.
Yes, that's exactly what the current tester does but with a more reliable connection to the inside of the fuse terminals.
You might also try starting from the bottom...its always the last one!:DYou have been reading.....another magnificent post by garethgas :beer:0 -
britishboy wrote: »As in my other thread currently running, having a battery drain issue with my Range Rover TD6. I want to measure to see if theres any drain once its turned off, I understand you need to leave it 15 minutes for everything to shut down and go to sleep (the ECU's etc), then what would I do to test for any drain?
Someone at work suggested a clamp meter around the negative cable from the battery, but i did read it may not read such a small drain (mA) on a car.
Any ideas please people?
Get a multimeter. Put it on Current. Disconnect the earth terminal on the battery. Put one of the probes on the disconnected earth terminal and the other on the earth terminal on the battery.0 -
TrickyWicky wrote: »You need a multimeter to measure the current drawn from the battery. Take off the positive terminal, put the red probe on the batter and then the negative probe on the battery terminal/wire that is no longer connected.
Not the positive, you do it with the negative so that way if you touch the bodywork with the spanner/screwdriver you don't end up shorting the battery.0 -
Best to connect the meter up with the earth strap still connected, and then remove the strap. That way, there's no interruption in current to whatever systems are running, so you'll get a better indication (i.e. no current drain from systems starting up from a power-down state).Notmyrealname wrote: »Get a multimeter. Put it on Current. Disconnect the earth terminal on the battery. Put one of the probes on the disconnected earth terminal and the other on the earth terminal on the battery.
Also, make sure (pretty much) everything is off first - you don't want to be pulling 30A through a meter that is only rated to 3A (for example).0 -
If the battery is good then you already know you have a power drain so carrying out the above procedure is only going to confirm what you already know.
I suggest a current tester which will identify the circuit which is faulty and therefore at least move you closer to fixing the problem
http://www.maplin.co.uk/automotive-current-tester-217879
Cheers gareth
Silly question do i use the tester while car is turned off? (sorry having a blonde day today)0 -
britishboy wrote: »Cheers gareth
Silly question do i use the tester while car is turned off? (sorry having a blonde day today)
If the problem occurs when it's off, then you need to recreate that condition.“I may not agree with you, but I will defend to the death your right to make an a** of yourself.”
<><><><><><><><><<><><><><><><><><><><><><> Don't forget to like and subscribe \/ \/ \/0
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