Testing For INTERMITTENTS & Poor Connections
WARNING: This page is about a different car, the 2002 Oldsmobile Aurora. However, it is still accessible from the selected car via links, so may be relevant.
Most intermittent conditions are caused by faulty electrical connections or wiring. Inspect for the following items:
- Wiring broken inside the insulation.
- Poor connection between the male and female terminal at a connector. See TESTING FOR PROPER TERMINAL CONTACT .
- Poor terminal-to-wire connection. Some conditions which fall under this description are: poor crimps, poor solder joints, crimping over the wire insulation rather than the wire itself, corrosion in the wire to terminal contact area, etc.
- Wire insulation which is rubbed-through. This causes an intermittent short as the bare area touches other wiring or parts of the vehicle.
- See INDUCING INTERMITTENT FAULT CONDITIONS in order to duplicate the conditions required in order to verify the complaint.
- See TESTING FOR ELECTRICAL INTERMITTENTS for test procedures to detect intermittent open, high resistance, short to ground, and short to voltage conditions.
- See SCAN TOOL SNAPSHOT PROCEDURE for advanced intermittent diagnosis.