I now have the trunk closed with my new meter out on the leads and meter on the 20A scale in a series with the battery and it jumped up pretty high when I locked the doors then went to around 6A for a few seconds then settled to 0.75A for about 40 minutes and now it's at 0.00A and jumps to 0.01A and back.. I feel stupid I don't know that but I'm going out to switch to a mA scale anyway. .stand by for edit.
edit: I found when it's resting and I disconnected the cable from the 20A socket I disconnected the battery and the count down starts all over when it reconnects so this time I'll touch the test cables together when I switch to mA scale. edit2: I was out standing by the meter for a few minutes on this second wait to sleepy time and noticed it's pulling 0.63A on the 20A scale instead of 0.75A (that is 630 and 750mA I just learned dah!) then I noticed it jump to 9A+ bouncing to the high 8A for a few sec. then back to 0.63A while counting down to sleep.. Hmmmm..any thoughts on 9A showing up for several sec 3 times in 10min while waiting for sleep? Jag got some VooDoo hopnin' mon. OK here we go Edit#3: I let it rest the second time until I had 0.00A on the 20A scale but just when I was about to switch to the mA scale it jumped to 9A again while I was looking at it and I have no idea WTF is going on but I don't think I should switch to the mA scale when it might jump to a 9A load. Any thoughts as to what might be happening with a 0.00A-0.01A at rest jumping to 9A then back to 0.00 at rest every few minutes ? same thing while waiting to rest but 0.75A jumping to 9A.. |
The jump to 9A at rest from 0.01A is extremely worrying and may prove to be challenging to track down.
If you can read the circuit diagrams, available at jagrepair.com for free, then isolation of the various fuse boxes in turn would point to where the 9A spike is coming from. Once tracked to a fuse box then you come down to individual circuits. Good luck and do keep us posted. |
But does it keep doing it and still do it after 45mins or so?
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Originally Posted by jimbov8
(Post 1669281)
The jump to 9A at rest from 0.01A is extremely worrying and may prove to be challenging to track down.
If you can read the circuit diagrams, available at jagrepair.com for free, then isolation of the various fuse boxes in turn would point to where the 9A spike is coming from. Once tracked to a fuse box then you come down to individual circuits. Good luck and do keep us posted. |
BTW the shutdown period often starts from zero again if you trigger something (like opening a door).
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Originally Posted by ZenFly
(Post 1669313)
I was worried when I saw that jump during the count down to sleep and yes "very worried" now. The thing that is most confusing to me is how do I even have 12.1v left from 12.6 overnight?(14 hrs) The car starts every day with the new battery but I'm sure not after 2 or 3 days sitting.
Another thought, since you haven't really found any faults once the car enters sleep mode: Do you really have a fault any more? If you didn't have a meter, what symptoms would you actually see now? I remember you originally had the Christmas light display, and a replacement battery seemed to fix that, didn't it? What was your initial concern with the replacement battery? Were you still getting the Christmas lights? I read back through this thread and may have missed something, but am not sure you were still getting the Christmas light syndrome anymore. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think you started checking for a parasitic drain as a precaution, but not because of any visible symptoms. Personally, I'm don't put much emphasis on the voltage measurement of a battery at rest. I may be a lone voice in the wilderness, but I don't think this reading should get much emphasis. Sure, something extreme like 8.0 indicates a dead battery. But splitting hairs between something like 12.1 vs. 12.6 on a battery at rest? I've read it's important on these cars, but I'm not 100% convinced. Now voltage under load? That's huge, and very important. But at rest? It's just an approximation that may not mean much. I think the main thing here is are you still getting the Christmas light display? And if so, how about swapping in your known-good battery for a few days and see how the car behaves? Since you're not finding anything obvious with the parasitic drain test, you may not have a problem anymore but just don't realize it yet. |
Thanks for all that.. I got some good advice early on and read quiescent drain several times and watched several parasitic draw tests on you tube before even starting. then printed the excellent quiescent drain procedure and had it in hand. Nothing was disturbed , trunk closed with leads to the meter. I still made a mistake the first time in disconnecting the loop to change my meter lead from the dedicated 20A input over to the 200mA before I did I just saw a jump to 9A. Isn't that 9,000mA at rest?
I just had the wild thought that a 9A draw in a spurt like that might be making some noise or sound that my old rocl'n'roll ears aren't getting so I'm going to set it up again tonight when it's quiet and have someone with ears close by. I'll tell my wife to listen for the sound of saving money. We could even listen with one of those old stethoscopes with the touch wand on it..Now that's funny right there I don't care who ya'are. I still had 11.89v left this morning from 12.6 last night and it starts like nothing is wrong . As long as I run it every day I wouldn't even notice if I wasn't messing with meters . I'm not in bad shape..Some that gave advice early on said "let us know how you make out" etc. so this is it and thanks again for reading and your comments. |
Here's another way to look at the situation:
If you threw in the towel, assuming there's some mysterious uncorrectable electrical fault, and sold the car in disgust (but kept your meter) and didn't say anything to the buyer, exactly what symptoms would the new owner see? Wouldn't they have a car that starts and runs just fine every day with no spurious faults? Nothing wrong with continue to gather data. Just keep in mind you may have already fixed it. |
Originally Posted by kr98664
(Post 1669479)
Here's another way to look at the situation:
If you threw in the towel, assuming there's some mysterious uncorrectable electrical fault, and sold the car in disgust (but kept your meter) and didn't say anything to the buyer, exactly what symptoms would the new owner see? Wouldn't they have a car that starts and runs just fine every day with no spurious faults? Nothing wrong with continue to gather data. Just keep in mind you may have already fixed it. |
Originally Posted by ZenFly
(Post 1669531)
You are absolutely correct..I am happy and said so a few times that all I have to do is run it every day an I wouldn't know a thing was wrong but sure as the sun comes up it will not start in 3 days left alone..
Please refresh my memory. Have you actually tried letting the car sit for three days since replacing the battery? Or are you afraid that's what might happen because it used to do that (plus turn on the Christmas lights) with the previous battery? At one point I think you had mentioned a fear of causing damage by starting with a low battery. Even if you get all the lights again, there's no permanent damage caused. There's no harm done in trying to let the fault duplicate itself for troubleshooting or confirmation of a fix. |
Originally Posted by kr98664
(Post 1669542)
Please refresh my memory. Have you actually tried letting the car sit for three days since replacing the battery? Or are you afraid that's what might happen because it used to do that (plus turn on the Christmas lights) with the previous battery?
At one point I think you had mentioned a fear of causing damage by starting with a low battery. Even if you get all the lights again, there's no permanent damage caused. There's no harm done in trying to let the fault duplicate itself for troubleshooting or confirmation of a fix. |
One suggestion as I had a very hard time trying to read the current draw in mA and I kept waking the car up with every connection. Plus I was afraid of burning up my meter or at least blowing the fuse if the current draw got too big.
Finally got a nice clamp on ammeter that reads in mA. GTC CM100. About $140 and reads from 1 mA to 100A! SO much easier to use a clamp on meter compared to running it inline. Until I got this meter I never could troubleshoot battery drains on ANY car I tried. The readings were just jumping around too much! . . . |
I may have found it... first I thought the car wouldn't go to sleep when I opened the trunk.. It did wake up again to 0.64A but sure enough it settled back to sleep again at 0.00-0.03 on the 20A scale so I started pulling fuses but to make it more fun I had to wait until it jumped to 9A then pull. That got old fast so I started pulling fuses in groups like all the windows and wait 5min because it jumped to 9v every minute or less.. Finally I pulled the row of 4 fuses that had both front seats , heated mirror and switch system power 4 relay and waited about 5min then 5 more minutes with no jump in amps. I put the important relay fuse back in with no problem and the same with the drivers seat fuse. The load didn't return.. I'll know in the morning..
__________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ _________________________________________ edit: 8hrs later my connected battery went down almost exactly like it did when it was disconnected standing alone. I want to thank everyone here for putting up with me through 73 posts and mostly cat_as_trophy for making "quiescent current drain" available with easy to understand step by step test procedures. Dead battery from a parasitic drain? Just google "quiescent current drain" and pick the link from this forum if you're looking for a (parasitic draw) or drain on your battery..With the right meter it might be all you need.. "parasitic draw" is what I searched on youtube if you want to watch it done but really the cat_as_trophy "quiescent current drain" is what I printed and had in hand. EDIT: I did a search and there are quite a few examples of auto seats draining batteries . Mostly in Mercedes but that could be because of the search words I chose. Anyway I'm going to guess I'm looking for a control module if I want to repair it ($$$?) but for now the fuse F-19 is out of the trunk distribution box and I have less than 30mA at rest. |
Originally Posted by ZenFly
(Post 1669672)
EDIT: I did a search and there are quite a few examples of auto seats draining batteries . Mostly in Mercedes but that could be because of the search words I chose. Anyway I'm going to guess I'm looking for a control module if I want to repair it ($$$?) but for now the fuse F-19 is out of the trunk distribution box and I have less than 30mA at rest.
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Originally Posted by kr98664
(Post 1670672)
Nice work! Any update? Is the car still behaving itself with the fuse pulled?
__________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ ___ EDIT: I checked one more time on the second day without starting the car.. from 12.50v two days ago I had 12.35v sitting after 30 hrs yesterday and I still have 12.28v after 42hrs so the normal 30mA draw is almost zip because this new battery has almost the same voltage drop while standing free disconnected. |
9A might (?) be the seat motor peak. Could a switch be stuck, telling the module to activate one of the motors? If you can find which motor you'd be able to figure the switch. To do that you'd put the meter in series with each motor and see if you get 9A (or so) surges.
Or try disconnecting the switches but I suppose it could be a short or the like in wiring to a switch. Maybe you can disconnect the seat's harness somewhere (at the module?) and see if the fault goes away. Then you know it's wiring/switch/... |
Originally Posted by JagV8
(Post 1670996)
9A might (?) be the seat motor peak. Could a switch be stuck, telling the module to activate one of the motors? If you can find which motor you'd be able to figure the switch. To do that you'd put the meter in series with each motor and see if you get 9A (or so) surges.
Or try disconnecting the switches but I suppose it could be a short or the like in wiring to a switch. Maybe you can disconnect the seat's harness somewhere (at the module?) and see if the fault goes away. Then you know it's wiring/switch/... |
Zen, under the front part of the seat you will find the module, held on by two 10mm nuts. Drop it down, disconnect it and open it up. The boards are a known problem and can be fixed.
Next thing to do is remove the seat and check the wiring harness under it for any signs of chafing, another known problem that can be repaired quite easily. |
Originally Posted by ZenFly
(Post 1669672)
I want to thank everyone here for putting up with me through 73 posts and mostly cat_as_trophy for making "quiescent current drain" available with easy to understand step by step test procedures.
Dead battery from a parasitic drain? Just google "quiescent current drain" and pick the link from this forum if you're looking for a (parasitic draw) or drain on your battery. With the right meter it might be all you need . . . the cat_as_trophy "quiescent current drain" is what I printed and had in hand. . . . for now the fuse F-19 is out of the trunk distribution box and I have less than 30mA at rest. Also, I must underline for those impatient with top/down fuse pulling, that the process of measuring the mV drop across the top of each fuse in situ (as suggested by JagV8 in original QCD thread) may save time . . . BUT, important caveat, you must be able to do so without re-awakening car! Cheers, :icon_beerchug: Ken |
"you must be able to do so without re-awakening car!" I had the bulbs pulled in the trunk but wondered what was going to happen when I opened it while the car was sleeping because there is always the "trunk open" warning on the dash. Sure enough it woke right up but I just waited again for the sleeping 0.00-0.03A ..I was lucky and didn't have to go past the trunk distribution box pulling fuses.
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