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battery drain

6K views 32 replies 7 participants last post by  BMWFatherFigure 
#1 · (Edited)
my battery is completely dead, and will drain quickly.

Besides the fact that its old and needs to be replaced. I think there is an electrical problem.

when following advice, using my volt meter on my fuse panel, water the meter and remove fuses until the drain goes away... ?
is that the suggested route of trouble shooting?

I couldn't seem to notice any change.

here is a picture of what i was doing. maybe i used the leads on the wrong spot?


and when i measure positive to body, i get the full battery voltage.
 

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#2 ·
your doing it wrong. what you need to do is remove the positive cable from the battery. attach lead to cable with alligator clip then the other lead to the positive terminal of the battery. then from there youll have your parasitic draw. and of course, now you remove the fuses one at a time and watch the change then from there you can find the location of the circuit that youre having problems with
 
#4 ·
+1, but I would hope the OP knows the difference between Volts and Amps anyway.
 
#6 ·
Camera upgrade,

I did make the mistake of only testing in volts earlier, and when i switched to amps, I noticed 2 fuses casing a draw.

however, there is still a small draw.

test idnicated a draw of 1.2amps.
one fuse dropped it to .5 amps. the final fuse dropped it to .3 amps....
thats as far down as the meter went. So, there is still a draw some where.
 

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#7 ·
1.2A is a HUGE drain. Alarms, clocks and memories etc run 0.03A total, typically.
 
#8 · (Edited)
Disconnect the alternator...a fused out diode can have the power flowing back down to ground.
See if that helps limit the draining current.

I still cannot work out from your picture how you are measuring current in series with the battery...best to totally remove the large battery clamp from the battery...connect the red lead from your meter to this clamp and the black meter lead to the red terminal on the battery. This way you will definitely get all current flow, including the flow through the alternator.

I see from your first picture that the right-most plug position on your meter will let you measure milli-amps provided you turn the rotary switch to the correct position...the plug position you are using is for up to 10 amps probably.
 
#9 ·
Start with large amp reading and work your way down :thumbup:
 
#10 ·
how would an alternator consume energy while its just sitting there?

I will have to try it.

In terms of how i was measuring it, look at where my leads are. They are touching the red and green main cables, from what i think are at the fuse panel... i dont know.. look at the picture.

It seems as if you are all suggesting i am doing it wrong. so, I will try the battery approach.
 
#12 · (Edited)
right! that approach makes much more sense. I had a weird reading, I would read the amp draw, it would climb to .68amps, then trickle down to .03. and it would stay there. I would remove the meter, wait 20 seconds, and it would do it all over again.

either way, i have isolated the trouble makers. With almost ninga like skills. I only tested 3 other fuses besides the bad ones.. i know...awesome.



anyway,
fuse 21, amp draw went from .03 to .01

fuse 27 went from .01 to .00...

fuse 21: glovebox light
flastlight?
ignition key/seat belt warning
interior lights
radio memory
trunk lights
radio memory
active check control
service interval indicator
obc?
fuel delivery
tachometer/fuel economy gauge ..... (mine swings back and forth)
digital clock
multi function clock.


Fuse 27-30 (fuse 30 was fine)
interior lights
central locking
obc?
radio amp
 

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#19 ·
That is a bit odd... but what I would assume is that the OBC, radio, etc are very briefly 'waking up' when they first get power (when you attach your meter) then they quickly go into their sleep (low power) state. If it stays at 0.03 as long as you keep your meter connected, I would say you are good to go.

I tried to nurse the battery along in my beater last year. It wasn't worth it. (Speaking as one of the cheapest people I know) I replaced it and forgot all the trouble I had trying to eke out the last bit of life from a dying battery. I'd say replace it and see if you have the draining problem with the new one.
 
#25 ·
optima will be about the lightest but also most expensive. the lipo battery wont last in these cars. they only have about a 200cca rating cause they are designed for motorcycles, atvs and smaller motors. we need about 600cca in the m20
 
#22 ·
Understanding current, Voltage & electron flow

I have noticed that Automotive Electronics and electrics puzzle most people to no end :eeps:
The more modern a car is, the more you will have to understand it :)
To refer electrical/electronic issues to a professional is an option, but then you might as well have everything done by professionals :dunno:

For instance to say that the initial high current draw is caused by
that the OBC, radio, etc are very briefly 'waking up' when they first get power
is correct because the Capacitors in these units have to recharge, but it also shows that you do not really understand the issue.
Please ! I do not want to step on anyones toes or sound like a wise ass, but basic electronic knowledge is something you can read up on & teach yourself.
 
#23 · (Edited)
A reading of 0.03 Amps is OK.

You get a "surging" of a current reading from the capacitance that you find in any large electrical circuit such as the E30 has....the radio has noise suppression capacitors inside it, same for ECU, cluster etc.

When you disconnect your battery to put your meter in series with it, the various capacitors discharge themselves back to ground.
When you now put your meter in series with the battery....all the capacitors "charge" themselves up....initially at a high current which then tapers off to a low current. This is standard capacitor behaviour....if you have a large capacitor handy....try connect your Ohm-meter over it. The internal meter battery will charge up the capacitor until it is fully charged at which stage it will show virtually open circuit on the Ohm-meter.

If there is a fused diode in the alternator it will allow current to flow back to ground. The diodes act as one-way valves normally so that positive current can flow into the battery from the alternator to charge the battery up.
Disconnecting the alternator temporarily to check for current drain will expose a fused diode but with a drain of only 0.03 Amps (30 milli amps) there is no problem with draining in this case.

A common problem for draining current is if there is no light bulb fitted in the glove box socket. The socket acts as the switch as well and having no bulb fitted at all...even a blown one...can cause a short to ground but this tends to be a rather large current drain which is not the case here.
 
#26 ·
I think you guys have covered every thing - for 'fused' diode read 'defective' incase the OP is looking for a diode with a fuse. Hope no body's toes hurt but you guys have enough trouble with 'earth', 'bonnet' and 'boot' when I post.
 
#29 ·
Problem?
 
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