Had an intermittent drain on a 2000 Bravada few years back. Finally found it. The vanity light switch was failing and the light for the vanity mirror on the sun visor would, sometimes, come on. Couldn’t see it because the flap was closed. Took forever to find.
It seems like every story of a battery drain is different. I haven't had a vanity mirror switch like that go, but I have had problems with a poorly wired radio and a door switch. I've also seen someones phone holder contacting the eject button on the radio and that was causing a drain.
Good info thanks. Always look at the vanity mirror lights first. In a dark area with the car off, key out, you should be able to see some light around the edges. Or could try to use a temperature reader. Handheld, you can get them at harbor freight. If the vehicle has been sitting for a few hours the visor area should be same temp as everything else around it. The old GM switches are just a little plunger like, the size of a pencil lead. If it is the vanity light, I would just pull the bulb out.
Good info, thanks. I would not suggest a BM 15D multimeter. I think they are sold under different names. Just a pain in the azzz all around. You have to press a button to toggle to the setting you need. The instructions are worthless, and to change the fuse you have to take off the plastic protective cover and need to use two paint can openers, look like bottle openers to pry it off. And the fuse was dead as you mentioned. Which is probably not the multimeter fault, but mine. And they do not list the size of fuse in the instructions. ugh.
There are a ton of multimeters out there, and some are definitely junk! I got mine from Home Depot and it's worked fine for me. There are certainly nicer ones out there, but I'm not using it every day so it's not like I need a high quality one. I did have trouble finding the correct fuses for mine as well, but they were at least listed so I knew what to look for.
You just taught me so much in so little! Great video. Straight to the point and very detailed as always. Those multimeters are very useful. I need to snag me one for sure.
The fuse isn't the issue, it just disconnects whatever is. For example if you isolate an aftermarket radio as the source of the draw, there's most likely an issue with the wiring that is causing the radio to draw power when the key is off. Pulling the fuse will stop power from going to the radio entirely. It technically solves your draw issue, but you also can't use your radio without the fuse in place. You'll want to diagnose the issue causing the draw.
I've never used one. Many more modern cars can retain some level of information even when disconnecting the battery. My 2000 Volvo will remember radio presets and seat memory settings.
@@elementn4107 Then go for it I guess? I've never had an issue with a car not running properly after a break in power so besides retaining the clock, trip, and radio presets I'm not sure why you'd need it.
@@StevesGarage Yes, I have a Pioneer double din since almost 12 years in my Civic. I also have Infinity components with crossovers. Everything was fine and this pop sound recently started, I checked the wiring too. Do you think it could be that the head unit is too old and can have issues?
@@aakudev It's been a while since I've done anything with car audio so it's hard for me to give you specific advice on that. It's possible you have a bad ground. You could also check the resistance of the speaker.
i did a draw test and i get 40ma with the remote starter. (new battery in 2022). 2-3 days not driving the car. the batter would get drain. i removed power to the remote starter and it draws only 20ma. the car would sit for 3-4 weeks and still be able to start fine. so you saying under 50ma is okay.. makes me confuse af.
Have you checked your alternator to make sure it's properly charging the battery? If it were me I'd also look over the wiring for the remote start system. Start by checking your grounds. I have a remote start system on my Volvo and it doesn't have that high of a draw.
@@RacecarsAndRicefish Just took a look at your channel to scope out the car... sorry to be the bearer of bad news 😅 52mA certainly isn't terrible, but I'd look into it. Maybe you just have a bad ground or something wired a little funky.
@@StevesGarage I've gotten it narrowed done to one fuse and it looks like there's only a couple things that run off it-- I'll have it solved in no time 😎 thx for this video
@@StevesGarage Im finding 48 - 52 mA, then I disconnect my 4 aftermarket gauges and it drops to 20.5mA, then I additionally disconnect my radio and I see 19.3mA. So one or multiple of my aftermarket gauges are the main issue. I might just have them run entirely from switched power? they'll forget their most recent color but that's fine lol
Had an intermittent drain on a 2000 Bravada few years back. Finally found it. The vanity light switch was failing and the light for the vanity mirror on the sun visor would, sometimes, come on. Couldn’t see it because the flap was closed. Took forever to find.
It seems like every story of a battery drain is different. I haven't had a vanity mirror switch like that go, but I have had problems with a poorly wired radio and a door switch. I've also seen someones phone holder contacting the eject button on the radio and that was causing a drain.
Good info thanks. Always look at the vanity mirror lights first. In a dark area with the car off, key out, you should be able to see some light around the edges. Or could try to use a temperature reader. Handheld, you can get them at harbor freight. If the vehicle has been sitting for a few hours the visor area should be same temp as everything else around it. The old GM switches are just a little plunger like, the size of a pencil lead. If it is the vanity light, I would just pull the bulb out.
Good info, thanks. I would not suggest a BM 15D multimeter. I think they are sold under different names. Just a pain in the azzz all around. You have to press a button to toggle to the setting you need. The instructions are worthless, and to change the fuse you have to take off the plastic protective cover and need to use two paint can openers, look like bottle openers to pry it off.
And the fuse was dead as you mentioned. Which is probably not the multimeter fault, but mine. And they do not list the size of fuse in the instructions. ugh.
There are a ton of multimeters out there, and some are definitely junk! I got mine from Home Depot and it's worked fine for me. There are certainly nicer ones out there, but I'm not using it every day so it's not like I need a high quality one.
I did have trouble finding the correct fuses for mine as well, but they were at least listed so I knew what to look for.
Great video but hard to see how you connect then leads. Are both black and red connected to negative post?
One goes to the negative post on the battery, the other to the negative battery cable.
You just taught me so much in so little! Great video. Straight to the point and very detailed as always. Those multimeters are very useful. I need to snag me one for sure.
Quick and informative was my goal! Multimeters are great to have around. You might not need one often, but when you do it's the perfect tool.
Dont forget to check water levels in battery. If its low the battery may not be able to sustain even a common 20mA draw.
Do they sell serviceable batteries anymore? I haven't seen one in years.
Would it be a good idea to replace the fuse or just permanently keep it empty?
The fuse isn't the issue, it just disconnects whatever is. For example if you isolate an aftermarket radio as the source of the draw, there's most likely an issue with the wiring that is causing the radio to draw power when the key is off. Pulling the fuse will stop power from going to the radio entirely. It technically solves your draw issue, but you also can't use your radio without the fuse in place. You'll want to diagnose the issue causing the draw.
What about the memory saver before disconnecting the battery
I've never used one. Many more modern cars can retain some level of information even when disconnecting the battery. My 2000 Volvo will remember radio presets and seat memory settings.
@@StevesGarage my professor told me to always use a memory saver especially on newer cars
@@elementn4107 Then go for it I guess? I've never had an issue with a car not running properly after a break in power so besides retaining the clock, trip, and radio presets I'm not sure why you'd need it.
Use distilled water or water made for the battery only. Never straight water.
Correct! As long as it's actually serviceable. You don't want to go cracking open a battery that isn't meant to be.
Thanks, my multimeter shows 11.0 draw, don't know what just happened, will check my radio, it just makes a pop sound every time I turn it on😢
The radio makes a pop sound, or the car does?
@@StevesGarage Yepp, I hear a pop sound from the front tweeters when turning the radio on.
@@aakudev Do you have aftermarket speakers or a head unit? It sounds like you need a crossover.
@@StevesGarage Yes, I have a Pioneer double din since almost 12 years in my Civic. I also have Infinity components with crossovers. Everything was fine and this pop sound recently started, I checked the wiring too. Do you think it could be that the head unit is too old and can have issues?
@@aakudev It's been a while since I've done anything with car audio so it's hard for me to give you specific advice on that. It's possible you have a bad ground. You could also check the resistance of the speaker.
i did a draw test and i get 40ma with the remote starter. (new battery in 2022). 2-3 days not driving the car. the batter would get drain. i removed power to the remote starter and it draws only 20ma. the car would sit for 3-4 weeks and still be able to start fine. so you saying under 50ma is okay.. makes me confuse af.
Have you checked your alternator to make sure it's properly charging the battery? If it were me I'd also look over the wiring for the remote start system. Start by checking your grounds. I have a remote start system on my Volvo and it doesn't have that high of a draw.
Mine is at 0.00 what can I do now I don't understand
Check your connection or your multimeter. You could be on the wrong setting, wrong ports, or have a blown fuse.
@@StevesGarage a blown fuse in the multi meter or vehicle?
@@football-qk8bq Your multimeter. If there was a blown fuse in your car something wouldn't have power.
@StevesGarage ok thank you
@@football-qk8bq You're welcome, good luck with it!
"anything that's not stock-- check those things first"
😭
is 52mA bad?
@@RacecarsAndRicefish Just took a look at your channel to scope out the car... sorry to be the bearer of bad news 😅 52mA certainly isn't terrible, but I'd look into it. Maybe you just have a bad ground or something wired a little funky.
@@StevesGarage I've gotten it narrowed done to one fuse and it looks like there's only a couple things that run off it-- I'll have it solved in no time 😎
thx for this video
@@RacecarsAndRicefish Woo! Narrowing it down is great! Glad the video helped.
@@StevesGarage Im finding 48 - 52 mA, then I disconnect my 4 aftermarket gauges and it drops to 20.5mA, then I additionally disconnect my radio and I see 19.3mA. So one or multiple of my aftermarket gauges are the main issue. I might just have them run entirely from switched power? they'll forget their most recent color but that's fine lol