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Author: Subject: Bad earth
ditchlewis

posted on 27/6/06 at 07:46 PM Reply With Quote
Bad earth

I have a bad earth.

i think it may be the fact that i hace connected the earth lead from the battery to the metal light guage metal plate used for the passenger footwell on my MK indy.

is this the wrong location?

Ditch

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ReMan

posted on 27/6/06 at 07:55 PM Reply With Quote
No, it should'nt be , unless you are'nt actually contacting the metal properly.
The light plate on the footwell would still carry about 500 Amps without getting warm.
What makes you say "i've got a bad earth", can you elaborate?

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JoelP

posted on 27/6/06 at 08:00 PM Reply With Quote
provided the panel is welded and you have a good connection to the panel, all should be well. If its riveted you should still be ok, just beware there might be sealant/adhesive in the mix too. I would try to put the earth onto a main chassis tube. Myself, id weld a bolt on, but thats not ideal if you have it powder coated already. Use a wire brush to ensure the metal surfaces are clean. Myself, id not use grease before bolting it up (some people use copper grease etc), id tighten it all up and then brush over with some grease to stop it rusting or seizing.
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Macbeast

posted on 27/6/06 at 08:39 PM Reply With Quote
Don't forget the flexible earth strap between engine and chassis to take starter current.
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britishtrident

posted on 28/6/06 at 06:26 AM Reply With Quote
Remember you also need to earth to the chassis or battery
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Aboardman

posted on 28/6/06 at 06:44 AM Reply With Quote
and the earth strap from the car to ground, to stop you getting car sick.
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ditchlewis

posted on 28/6/06 at 07:09 AM Reply With Quote
ohh forgot the last one, my fiance always gets sick in the car, could be the way i drive

will move the battery earth strap to a main chassis member....

what about the gearbox earth strap?? is this required to be a perfect no resistance connection?

As for a bad earth, the engine will barely turn over at all even when the battery is fully charged or when connected to another car to jump start it..

ditch:

[Edited on 28/6/06 by ditchlewis]

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JoelP

posted on 28/6/06 at 07:33 AM Reply With Quote
when using jump leads, connect the black one to the engine rather than -ve terminal. This reduces the distance the charge needs to travel, and would show up a bad earth. I once had a big lead that was broken inside, it looked just fine but was a really crap earth. I have two earths now just for the sake of it!
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Hellfire

posted on 28/6/06 at 08:29 AM Reply With Quote
From reading this - you can't overdo earthing...






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ReMan

posted on 28/6/06 at 08:29 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by ditchlewis

will move the battery earth strap to a main chassis member....
You should'net neet to if its a welded in footwell plate

what about the gearbox earth strap?? is this required to be a perfect no resistance connection?
You should,nt need this as well as an engine strap

As for a bad earth, the engine will barely turn over at all even when the battery is fully charged or when connected to another car to jump start it..
The engine earth strap should fiw this then, unless its a poor connection in the +ve lead

ditch:

[Edited on 28/6/06 by ditchlewis]

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Hellfire

posted on 28/6/06 at 08:29 AM Reply With Quote
From reading this - you can't overdo earthing...






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britishtrident

posted on 28/6/06 at 10:08 AM Reply With Quote
Most jump leads even those sold as "Heavy Duty" are NBG --- as a rule of thumb if the cost less than 20 quid they won't do the job.

A simple check for a duff earth lead is connect one of the jump leads between the battery negative terminnal and the engine block.

You need need to do a full set of battery voltage checks --- first charge the battery fully with modern batteries this is to over 13 volts after battery is taken off charge, older battery chargers simply aren't up to the job. Then do a cranking voltage check and mesure the voltage drop between the battery negative and the engine block when cranking, the voltage accross the battery when cranking.

[Edited on 28/6/06 by britishtrident]

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ditchlewis

posted on 29/6/06 at 07:11 AM Reply With Quote
many thanks lads will do the voltage checks and check the live side of the circuit.

Ditch

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