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-   -   Current draw when engine off? (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/porsche-911-technical-forum/908219-current-draw-when-engine-off.html)

groovydude 03-30-2016 12:09 PM

Current draw when engine off?
 
I drove three days ago in the day time. When I went to start the car this AM the battery was totally dead. The lights were not left on, the doors had been closed, everything electronic that I can see has been off. How can I test to see if something is pulling juice out of the battery when the car is off? And if there's a short, any ideas on how to find it?

moneymanager 03-30-2016 12:22 PM

Try a search. Lots of threads on all aspects this subject here.

pemz0r 03-30-2016 12:30 PM

Get a mulitmeter, and set it to amps
Unhook the positive battery cable to the battery.
Place the Black needle on the positive cable.
Place the Red needle on the positive terminal of the battery.
If a voltage appears that means that there is a draw.

groovydude 03-30-2016 01:02 PM

Thanks! There was a draw and I found the culprit - the glove box light was on (yes, I feel foolish, but I couldn't see this very easily in the daylight). I must have bumped it getting my sunglasses out (Targa owner). :)

pemz0r 03-30-2016 04:33 PM

Awesome!

Guardsred911 03-30-2016 08:50 PM

After a few days with bad/ hard starting, I installed a battery cutoff switch. So my draw is zero!!

tirwin 03-31-2016 01:49 AM

Glad you found the problem. Just to answer the question (I just went through this recently) I found on my SC that once I eliminated the parasitic draw the steady state use was 7-8 mA. Some people suggest anything higher than 30-50mA is something to investigate. That's a good rule of thumb.

T77911S 03-31-2016 02:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pemz0r (Post 9059415)
Get a mulitmeter, and set it to 200.
Unhook the positive battery cable to the battery.
Place the Black needle on the positive cable.
Place the Red needle on the positive terminal of the battery.
If a voltage appears that means that there is a draw.

that's not correct.

you have to measure AMPS.

it takes very very little current for a meter to measure voltage.

a test light works too. the brighter it is, the more current

pemz0r 03-31-2016 05:45 PM

you are correct. i meant amps not volts.


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