brynm
10+ year member
CarAudio.com Elite
Make sure you subtract the resistance from whatever you are using to get to the batt negative as well, I can't imagine it would be that much but...
I read I was supposed to touch both leads then subtract that from my reading but I didn't get a stable reading from both leads, so what do you mean by the resistances I'm using to get the battery negative exactly?Make sure you subtract the resistance from whatever you are using to get to the batt negative as well, I can't imagine it would be that much but...
Yes its hooked up to the amp, but the ignition was OFF when tested.is it hooked up to your amp already? if so make sure your ignition is off. if power is flowing through it then that would make a difference.
What price range is considered a good meter?my cheap dmm would read stupid numbers like that but borrowed a buddys fluke meter and they all zeroed out on his. perfect grounds FTW. get a good meter or you will be guessing. hence this thread.
I read your OP that you were using another piece of wire to go to the negative battery terminal, subtract the resistance of any wire that is not a normal part of the circuit.I read I was supposed to touch both leads then subtract that from my reading but I didn't get a stable reading from both leads, so what do you mean by the resistances I'm using to get the battery negative exactly?
Oh makes sense, how do I figure the resistance of the wire? I just used some extra Cadence speaker wire I had laying around.I read your OP that you were using another piece of wire to go to the negative battery terminal, subtract the resistance of any wire that is not a normal part of the circuit.
Well I can do that, or I could just ground it directly to the battery ground correct?I don't know wire generally doesnt have much of a resistance unless you run AC through it. I could be wrong but if you are truely getting 22.4 ohms, I dont think the other components are adding that much more resistance. But I would measure anyway just to be sure. If all else fails, I ran my ground back to the engine block, this works great
Either of these as a DMM would work?of course, a quality meter is required. you can get an affordable meter of decent quality from MCM Electronics. Tenma is a nice budget brand. They even have a clamp meter that measures DC current for $60 or so.