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When your car doesn’t start, often the battery is the culprit. Unfortunately, most vehicle owners do not check their battery until it fails. As preventative maintenance, the suggested best practice is ...
You can use them to test for voltage drop at various circuits, blown fuses, current draws, heating elements, and to verify bad cable connections. The most common task is checking pedestal voltage.
This video covers the essential steps to properly test a car's alternator and diagnose common alternator issues. The guide ...
Voltage Drop - This test is used to identify the location of circuit resistance. Additionally, the test is performed to measure the amount of voltage consumed or lost by a component or connection.
If you’re using a digital multimeter, set the dial to DC voltage. Next, take your multimeter’s black lead to the negative battery terminal and the red lead to the positive terminal.
If your power supply's voltage is 125 volts, switch your multimeter to read a range of 100-200 volts.
Place the multimeter's contacts on the battery's poles – the red one against its side and the black one on the top. If the battery's voltage output is less than 2 V, purchase a new BIOS battery.