Augoose
Lieutenant Junior Grade
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2010
- Messages
- 1,223
I've got a significant drain issue and I'm trying to locate it - any suggestions? Over the course of one week, my new battery is totally dead. In my jeep I'd just hook up a test light and begin pulling fuses until the light goes out - but my test light is broken and I can't seem to find a fuse box anyway.
I'm planning on disconnecting the positive lead to the battery, clipping the red lead on the meter to the positive cable and then clipping the black lead to the battery ground in order to check for voltage drain. My question is how can I efficiently disconnect items to check to see if they are causing a drain without a fuse box?
What are some common culprits of battery drain? My blower wasn't on, my bilge has a float switch so it shouldn't have been on as the boat was on a trailer and my lights were turned off. My radio wasn't on either and that's about it as far as external electronic devices.
I just recalled this - my float switch allows 11.3 volts to the bilge pump all the time and then when the float is tripped, the voltage increases to 12.3 and the bilge turns on. When there is 11.3 volts, the bilge doesn't run. I would have thought that when the float switch isn't tripped, there should be zero volts to the bilge - could this be my problem? I called West Marine and they assured me that 11.3 volts to the bilge "when it's off" is normal.
Mercruiser 4.3 w/ Alpha I
1989 Caravelle ES 202
thanks
I'm planning on disconnecting the positive lead to the battery, clipping the red lead on the meter to the positive cable and then clipping the black lead to the battery ground in order to check for voltage drain. My question is how can I efficiently disconnect items to check to see if they are causing a drain without a fuse box?
What are some common culprits of battery drain? My blower wasn't on, my bilge has a float switch so it shouldn't have been on as the boat was on a trailer and my lights were turned off. My radio wasn't on either and that's about it as far as external electronic devices.
I just recalled this - my float switch allows 11.3 volts to the bilge pump all the time and then when the float is tripped, the voltage increases to 12.3 and the bilge turns on. When there is 11.3 volts, the bilge doesn't run. I would have thought that when the float switch isn't tripped, there should be zero volts to the bilge - could this be my problem? I called West Marine and they assured me that 11.3 volts to the bilge "when it's off" is normal.
Mercruiser 4.3 w/ Alpha I
1989 Caravelle ES 202
thanks