Hi guys, after searching on the Internet and here, I could'nt find any answer hence this first post...
First, the background: bought a 1987 GT Convertible here in The Netherlands, one of the previous owner asked a shop to install an aftermarket alarm (yikes) with a integrated circuit-breaker and a remote control to open the doors.
One day, I take the car for a ride and BAM, no more battery (it was dead anyway) so I bought a brand new one and leave the car like that; 3 days after, want to take car and BAM, new battery totally drained!
Ok I think, maybe the alarm is draining the battery I tell myself, since when you remove the key the circuit-breaker kicks in and you have to use the remote to deactivate it.
So this winter, I've tackled to remove everything related to the alarm: the wires, the siren, the circuit-breaker, the trunk & hood detectors, etc. and found out what it is to have broken wires, especially on the ignition switch:
After buying a new switch on NPD to get the proper wire size & connectors, I managed to rewire everything with Posi-Locks because I didn't want to put heat on heat shrinks due to the tight space under the steering column:
I've installed new battery cables (NEG & POS), cleaned the NEG post terminal next to the battery and reinstalled the battery (fully charged) only with the POS cable since I don't want to end-up with fried fuses (yet).
Now when I measure the resistance on the fuses panel, I get between 1.5 & 4.0 ohms on nearly every fuses except fuses #6, 11, 18 where I read 35 ohms.
For the fuse #11, I think it comes from the fact that the previous owner had installed an aftermarket amp with a 12-CD changer in the trunk and rewired everything from the radio to this installation so I've removed everything and I think I've forgot a ground somewhere.
Fuses #6 & 18 are bugging me, is it normal to have such a high resistance? The key is not on the ignition and only the POS battery side is wired.
Thanks,
Oliver
First, the background: bought a 1987 GT Convertible here in The Netherlands, one of the previous owner asked a shop to install an aftermarket alarm (yikes) with a integrated circuit-breaker and a remote control to open the doors.
One day, I take the car for a ride and BAM, no more battery (it was dead anyway) so I bought a brand new one and leave the car like that; 3 days after, want to take car and BAM, new battery totally drained!
Ok I think, maybe the alarm is draining the battery I tell myself, since when you remove the key the circuit-breaker kicks in and you have to use the remote to deactivate it.
So this winter, I've tackled to remove everything related to the alarm: the wires, the siren, the circuit-breaker, the trunk & hood detectors, etc. and found out what it is to have broken wires, especially on the ignition switch:
After buying a new switch on NPD to get the proper wire size & connectors, I managed to rewire everything with Posi-Locks because I didn't want to put heat on heat shrinks due to the tight space under the steering column:
I've installed new battery cables (NEG & POS), cleaned the NEG post terminal next to the battery and reinstalled the battery (fully charged) only with the POS cable since I don't want to end-up with fried fuses (yet).
Now when I measure the resistance on the fuses panel, I get between 1.5 & 4.0 ohms on nearly every fuses except fuses #6, 11, 18 where I read 35 ohms.
For the fuse #11, I think it comes from the fact that the previous owner had installed an aftermarket amp with a 12-CD changer in the trunk and rewired everything from the radio to this installation so I've removed everything and I think I've forgot a ground somewhere.
Fuses #6 & 18 are bugging me, is it normal to have such a high resistance? The key is not on the ignition and only the POS battery side is wired.
Thanks,
Oliver