NovacaineFix
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Back in the days when I was a auto tech, I would run into this from time to time (grounding issues).
It is one of the most overlooked items on any vehicle with an engine, battery and charging system. Even more complicated with computers and electronics.
May I suggest using multiple grounding straps?
https://www.google.com/search?q=aut...ITKAhVL8mMKHSW5DoMQ_AUICCgC&biw=1487&bih=1242
12g wire and 10g for that matter, may be sufficient for some applications, but lends itself to failure fairly easy.
They way to think about grounding is not to ground thongs but to see it as a electron flow return back to the battery. Your return lines (ground straps/cables) should equal that if not be greater than the cable feeding your starter, just to be safe.
Here is a good example:
I had a Chevy Camaro that I rebuilt and replaced the engine for a friend/customer. Several weeks later, they complained that the floor shifter was hard to shift. I was thinking it may have had a broken mount somewhere. Looking at it, and shifting while the engine was running, I noticed sparks within the shifter console. I checked the mounts anyway, just to be sure, nope rock solid.
While the car was up in the air, I did notice that a ground strap had broken off, the eyelet was still attached, but no cable.
The shifter cable was no acting as the ground, since it was the last thing that was metal that was not insulated from ground.
Replaced the ground strap and shifter cable, problem solved!
Remember not all metal items are fully grounded. The engine is not, the engine mounts insulate it from the chassis. You have to use a strap(s) to provide that path to chassis ground back to the battery. I would use multiple straps if you have the room, this way you provide path to ground than needed and also create redundancy if a strap corrodes or breaks.
It is one of the most overlooked items on any vehicle with an engine, battery and charging system. Even more complicated with computers and electronics.
May I suggest using multiple grounding straps?
https://www.google.com/search?q=aut...ITKAhVL8mMKHSW5DoMQ_AUICCgC&biw=1487&bih=1242
12g wire and 10g for that matter, may be sufficient for some applications, but lends itself to failure fairly easy.
They way to think about grounding is not to ground thongs but to see it as a electron flow return back to the battery. Your return lines (ground straps/cables) should equal that if not be greater than the cable feeding your starter, just to be safe.
Here is a good example:
I had a Chevy Camaro that I rebuilt and replaced the engine for a friend/customer. Several weeks later, they complained that the floor shifter was hard to shift. I was thinking it may have had a broken mount somewhere. Looking at it, and shifting while the engine was running, I noticed sparks within the shifter console. I checked the mounts anyway, just to be sure, nope rock solid.
While the car was up in the air, I did notice that a ground strap had broken off, the eyelet was still attached, but no cable.
The shifter cable was no acting as the ground, since it was the last thing that was metal that was not insulated from ground.
Replaced the ground strap and shifter cable, problem solved!
Remember not all metal items are fully grounded. The engine is not, the engine mounts insulate it from the chassis. You have to use a strap(s) to provide that path to chassis ground back to the battery. I would use multiple straps if you have the room, this way you provide path to ground than needed and also create redundancy if a strap corrodes or breaks.