Closed Circuit Current Draw Testing: Notes
Increased closed-circuit currents may occur permanently or intermittently and cause the battery to discharge prematurely. The increase in closed circuit current may be caused by a faulty control unit or by the installation of a non-approved accessory.
In a situation where a vehicle has broken down due to a discharged battery, for diagnostic purposes it is important not to disconnect the battery. The control unit may reset if the battery is disconnected. Following a reset, a faulty control unit may start functioning correctly again, making accurate diagnosis impossible.
Tools Needed:
- Closed Circuit Current Measurement Adapter.
- MoDic Adapter.
- DISplus, MoDic or DVOM.
To correctly measure closed-circuit current, measurement adapter 61 2 300 (P/N 90 88 6 612 300) should be used. This tool provides a bridge to ground, before the negative battery terminal is disconnected, and this prevents the control units from being reset.
The additional use of MoDiC adapter 61 2 310 (P/N 90 88 6 612 310) provides a method for current measurements over an extended period of time.
The measuring device needed depends on the situation.
The DISplus may be used in situations of suspected high current draw.
The 1000 amp probe measures AC and DC current from 0 to 1000 amps. It is a self calibrating inductive pick-up. (Use this pick-up with current draws over 10 amps) The DISplus, through MFK 1 is capable of measuring up to 2 amps.
The MoDic is particularly suitable for extended measurements and provides a graphical readout of recorded measurements over time. It is recommended for the situations where the use of a multimeter provided insufficient information for problem diagnosis.
The DVOM may be used for measurements up to 10 amps either with the measurement adapter or alone.