In light of the Alternator, I wonder if you have a simple tool that I found - beats any moneymaker YT or any person trying to take advantage of others that are desperate for ideas on fixing their car and finding low-cost methods to avoid getting stuck with big repair bills...
Got a Electrical Tester?
Like this
Because it also can be installed from the Battery Positive Terminal - to the Ground Bolt that the Battery Ground cable goes to...
Why? Because you can look for SHORTS, as well as ACTIVE circuits...
Then Why Filament? Like a Flashlight?
Yes. Because there will be times where a LOAD is needed to be placed across the system, to drain the capacitors and extra stored energy when you need to reset the PCM or even the BCM due to a fault that got fixed, but the system needs to drain itself so it can "boot" from it's OEM and "Learn" your new fixed system all over again - a form of training the PCM and BCM to start talking to one anther and learn each others habits. A simple Flashlight bulb of the older Filament.
How is that done?
See the Clip? That clip bites into attaches to the Ground Bolt on the car, you can then place the testers probe lead into the Positive terminal using the Post to terminal clamp "gap" to hold the tip.
Bury it, stick it in - firmly into the gap between the positive post and the bolted clamp and note the light is now on - now disconnect the Battery Negative post clamp and the light will go out - the Filament has taken all the STORED energy thru itself - into Ground as a Short - the Bulb will light when there's plenty of power from the Battery.
But when you pull the Ground cable - the stored energy flows thru the bulb and to ground. The circuit provides a means to drain the systems own power to ground thru this circuit - the tester uses the standard filament bulb to light, but the bulb itself is wire - so it too can act like a dead short. This drains the system - leave it in this state for 10 minutes to ensure the reset is complete. Reconnect the Ground cable to the Battery post, the tester will light up and you can remove the tester from the post and ground bolt - RESET complete.
The Filament is a wire - a piece of metal (Tungsten/Nichrome) that heats up and glows brightly when power flows thru it. A wire can pass any power thru itself - the Filament being metal like wire - can also pass power thru itself. When power flows thru this filament - it starts to heat up because is has a small amount of resistance when the wire is cold - heating causes it to exhibit a resistance to the flow of power and it exhibits an increasing resistance to the flow of power thru it. It is an electrical short - much like a fuse, but controlled, by the type of metal wire used as the filament. It will light - getting brighter until it too passes a point of too much power and the filament opens - just like a fuse.
Otherwise it looks like a dead short for any lower voltage and current - it will still flow thru it, just there's not enough power in the trickle charges left passing thru it to light the bulb but still allows power thru it and looks like a dead short.
This is how you can reset the system and drain off the Non-volatile Memory - forcing a reset. Apply a short across the terminals - using the filament of the bulb of the tester to provide the short - you use the tip to one and the clip to the other terminal you make a circuit complete - it will consume all the power within it. This drop causes the memory to be erased - reset to "0". .When you reconnect the battery to supply power - the memory of previous operations and performance, emissions and control states are lost, emptied, removed - you start over.
Now you can also use it to determine is power drain is thru a charging system issue or you have an accessory still using - pulling power from the battery - you can do the same test only instead of placing the leads across the battery - you use the Tester as a CONDUCTOR - like the Ground Cable it takes place of it - power losses will light the bulb.
Here's an Example
- - to find out if you have a power drain
- Start the car
- - and verify you have air AC fan stuff like that, then you switch off all lights, overhead, turn off everything
- - and make sure sure all the doors windows and anything else shut closed
- - ONLY roll down DRIVERS SIDE Window - leave the car in PARK - pop the hood,
- Get out of the car - close the door,
- you left the engine running and at idle
- - so you have a system charging
- - open the hood and prepare the tester to act like the Ground cable
- - you're doing all of this while the engine charges the battery and all the accessories are off
- - now once you're ready
- - don't open the doors, just reach in and turn off the ignition - PULL THE KEY - Everything off ok?.
- Go back to the Battery Post Ground cable - loosen it but don't pull yet, allow the engine to POWER Down - reset the fuel injectors and seat the throttle - all the stuff it needs to do to power itself down.
- When it's quiet (the engine) now reach for the Ground Cable and pull it - AT THE SAME TIME - attach the Tester to the Battery Post with it's Clip to ground bolt.
- - you attach the Tester tip to the NEGATIVE POST POST of the Battery - the Circuit Tester completes the Circuit, acting as what the Ground Cable does.
- - The Clip goes to the ground bolt - and tip to Negative terminal - then loosen the Battery Clamp and pull the Ground cable .
Now, the moment of truth - When the Battery Cable is removed from the Post, the TESTER becomes what that Cable did - does the Tester light? Ok if it does, give it a moment - leave it in this state for several minutes.
Does the light stay on? Then your answer is YES, it's some kind of Electrical fault in the system - you DO have a power drain in the system.
Might need to have the Alternator rechecked. It may be a Diode in the Alternator - or a A/C relay not clicking off.
Could be a Dome light switch gone bad, onto a Trunk compartment light stuck on, to a Glove Box courtesy light doing the same thing. The Air damper door cycling all the time - because it can't tell the BCM it's parked.
Even a Fuse that got put in in the wrong spot - now a circuit is active that shouldn't be - draining the battery.
Does this mean the BCM is bad? Maybe. How about the PCM? Possible.
So what steps can be taken? May need to pull fuses until you can find one that MAKES THE TESTER LIGHT GO OUT during this test.
There are two fuse blocks and one Fusible link buss block at the Battery.
Best to start with the easier one - under the hood. This one is used by the PCM but sends power to the BCM inside the car.
Inside the car is the BCM.
- one that the BCM uses - is powered from the main fuse block the PCM uses under the hood.
The BCM also has a Fuse Block of its own. To power itself from the vehicle and it also uses this same block, from itself, to branch off to circuits it operates - Power Doors Windows - even the lights. SRS, CAN even SYNC.
- - Grab your owners Manual and Locate your fuse blocks - both inside the car, and under the hood.
- You can try locating specific fuses of the larger amp ratings and pull them first, if the light goes out - you found the system causing this condition - but not the real sub-system that has the fault.
- If the Light doesn't go out, reinstall fuse and proceed to the next one.
- Do this using the Owners manuals layout as a guide to help find the system causing this condition.
- If you can't make the light go out - the fused side of the electrical system may not be the problem - but it is the easier system to check first.
- You may need to locate the main terminal RED BATTERY TERMINAL cover and remove it to expose the Fusible links and you'll need to unbolt those to see if the light goes out. If you're not comfortable with this step - you don't have to do it - but keep in mind this system may be the one causing the fault and will expose you to a continuous drain and dead battery problems until you get it serviced.
The PCM Takes care of most of what is under the hood and goes thru the Hood Fuse Block assembly.
Some Climate control goes thru both the PCM and BCM to handle FAN, A/C - Heat - uses the Engines PCM to provide the A/C compressor and clutch to operate and cool thru the Climate Controls - but uses the FAN Heater and Which vent to blow air thru - thru the BCM.
The Dashboard, Instrument Cluster and Center Console use both BCM and PCM directly as idiot lights and Gauges, and also thru CAN as a means to share, store and update systems.
So Fuses power a lot of different sub systems as well as the main ones - so not all fuses will have power thru them because of the main fuse or relay that the PCM or BCM use to direct power - does not always provide power for the subsystem at any given moment.
It is this condition that may occur when the system affected by it - receives power and never shuts off. It can cause a cycling condition or worse a stuck, binding condition for a servo or motor to then seize and basically prevent itself from moving a cam to move a lever of a switch to tell the system to turn me off.
So you may need to see if the Fuses can receive power - like they should - or receive power when they should not. A Circuit Tester can help with this.
The Tester "clip" is clipped to the Ground Bolt, or known frame bolt of/For/To ground if you have to check the BCM (inside car).
The Tip of the probe only has to touch the "tip" of the fuse metal exposed at the number of the amps the fuse is...
Test both sides!
If the Tester lights on both sides
the FUSE is POWERED and still GOOD
But should it get power ALL the Time?
Read the Owners Manuals ' section on Fuse, their location and function.
If there is power flowing into the Fuse, it will light the Lamp - the Tester lights because it is connected across the power source and to the Ground point you clipped to.
That is where your owners manual comes in, you will have to find the circuit it is assigned to and can help troubleshoot the problem.
IF say, the BCM is using power, but sending it to the Climate Control system when the key is OUT of the ignition and the Car should be off, you can pull the Fuse that works this sub-system and have the system checked - pulling the Fuse is a TEMPORARY solution to keep the Battery from draining and you getting left stranded somewhere.