Author Topic: Tracing an active short  (Read 1925 times)

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Offline StonentTopic starter

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Tracing an active short
« on: November 16, 2014, 08:18:05 pm »
No expensive FLIR to find your short? Here's an easy way from one of my favorite car repair channels using a circuit breaker, a test light and a auto-parts store analog ammeter. In this case, the fuse keeps blowing when you try to start the car.  But where is the short?  The fuse feeds a lot of circuits so you need to know where to look. This guy owns his own repair facility but he also teaches college classes on vehicle repair.

« Last Edit: November 16, 2014, 08:21:36 pm by Stonent »
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Offline TheBay

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Re: Tracing an active short
« Reply #1 on: November 17, 2014, 12:22:37 pm »
Interesting video, there are some better ways of doing this however but his method does work.
Though on a modern vehicle I would not be using this method unless you want to replace expensive control modules. I also use a PowerProbe PP3, but you really have to know what you are doing especially keeping away from CAN/Data wires.
 


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