Please Help...Electrical Problem

limppimp

Founding Member
Mar 10, 2002
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I have done some searching on this problem and cant seem to get a clear answer. My car battery keeps draining when the car is turned off. When it sits over night it is completely drained the next morning. I had the alternator tested and it was fine. This is also my second brand new battery. I hear you can hook up a multi-meter and pull fuses to find out which circuit is draining. How exactly do you do this? I am a beginner when it comes to using a multimeter and electrical problems so I need specifics on everything. Thanks!
 
Typically it is something draining the battery. Small things like glove box or courtesy lights are often the culprits. If you have an aftermarket stereo or alarm system, it is also suspect.

The ideal method is to disconnect the positive terminal, and connect a Digital Multimeter (DVM) between the positive terminal on the battery and the positive cable. Set the DVM on a low current scale of 2-5 amps if it doesn't auto range. Watch the current draw, and then start pulling out fuses. When you see a sudden drop in the current, that circuit is the likely culprit. Note that the computer, radio & clock will draw less than 1/10 amp to keep the settings alive.

See http://assets.fluke.com/appnotes/automotive/beatbook.pdf. You will need the Adobe Acrobat viewer which is also a free download – http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html
 
OK here is what I have done:
I pulled each fuse and put a DVM where the fuse was. I set my DVM to read amps at 200 micros. Two things really stuck out. My [Air Bag System] is drawing 106.1 and my [Brake on/off (BOO) switch, Electronic Flasher] is drawing 68.3 amps. Are these normal?
 
By the way my airbag flashes this code

34 | Low resistance in driver air bag circuit | L |

Its been doing it for about a year now. But I never had a problem witht he battery until now. Could that be the problem?
 
limppimp said:
OK here is what I have done:
I pulled each fuse and put a DVM where the fuse was. I set my DVM to read amps at 200 micros. Two things really stuck out. My [Air Bag System] is drawing 106.1 and my [Brake on/off (BOO) switch, Electronic Flasher] is drawing 68.3 amps. Are these normal?

Anything you pick up on the microamp scale is going to be negligible and would not drain your battery overnight. Put all your fuses back in and connect the meter between your battery and cable as mentioned in JRichkers post to see what the total current draw of the car is and try to narrow it down that way by seeing which fuse(s) cause the most drop.
 
limppimp said:
By the way my airbag flashes this code

34 | Low resistance in driver air bag circuit | L |

Its been doing it for about a year now. But I never had a problem witht he battery until now. Could that be the problem?
Low resistance = shorted circuit. Could be your problem.
 
Well it has the symbol for micro on it. (the u looking symbol) I had it on 200u.

I beginning to think the air bag might be the problem. I need to fix it anyway. Any idea on how to fix that code 34?