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#1
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HELP!!! Cig. Lighter: 9 ohms between POS and GROUND????
I've been ready to make my changes to my cig. lighter from ignition to "always on", and I discovered something semi disturbing before I made the changes. Between the positive and negative terminals of the cigarette lighter (pos is center, and ground/neg is shell) I'm expecting 0 resistance. Without that thing depressed there should be no closed circuit at all, right???? I'm getting ~8 / ~9 Ohms between the two. (power is not supplied by the battery at this point, so I'm not getting any "stray" readings). HELP, is this a fire in the making????? -- "I don't want FOP, God dammit! I'm a DAPPER DAN MAN!" |
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#2
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Thomas G. Marshall coughed up:
> I've been ready to make my changes to my cig. lighter from ignition to > "always on", and I discovered something semi disturbing before I made > the changes. > > Between the positive and negative terminals of the cigarette lighter > (pos is center, and ground/neg is shell) I'm expecting 0 resistance. > Without that thing depressed there should be no closed circuit at > all, right???? > > I'm getting ~8 / ~9 Ohms between the two. (power is not supplied by > the battery at this point, so I'm not getting any "stray" readings). > > HELP, is this a fire in the making????? Furthermore, the fuse is pulled when I checked this. -- "I don't want FOP, God dammit! I'm a DAPPER DAN MAN!" |
#3
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Thomas G. Marshall coughed up:
> Thomas G. Marshall coughed up: >> I've been ready to make my changes to my cig. lighter from ignition >> to "always on", and I discovered something semi disturbing before I >> made the changes. >> >> Between the positive and negative terminals of the cigarette lighter >> (pos is center, and ground/neg is shell) I'm expecting 0 resistance. In my haste, I goofed that up of course. I'm expecting infinite resistance, and instead and receiving 8. (?), which indicates /some/ sort of connection between the two. >> Without that thing depressed there should be no closed circuit at >> all, right???? >> >> I'm getting ~8 / ~9 Ohms between the two. (power is not supplied by >> the battery at this point, so I'm not getting any "stray" readings). >> >> HELP, is this a fire in the making????? > > Furthermore, the fuse is pulled when I checked this. -- http://www.allexperts.com is a nifty way to get an answer to just about /anything/. |
#4
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"Thomas G. Marshall" . com>
wrote in message news:g4Aed.677$PZ4.660@trndny07... > Thomas G. Marshall coughed up: >> Thomas G. Marshall coughed up: >>> I've been ready to make my changes to my cig. lighter from ignition >>> to "always on", and I discovered something semi disturbing before I >>> made the changes. >>> >>> Between the positive and negative terminals of the cigarette lighter >>> (pos is center, and ground/neg is shell) I'm expecting 0 resistance. > > > In my haste, I goofed that up of course. I'm expecting infinite > resistance, > and instead and receiving 8. (?), which indicates /some/ sort of > connection > between the two. What reading do you get with the ignition in the on/run position? Some circuits rather than going open when off, go to ground when off. Very important distinction to know to look for when in the business of installing alarms and such. |
#5
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Seth coughed up:
> "Thomas G. Marshall" > . com> wrote in > message news:g4Aed.677$PZ4.660@trndny07... >> Thomas G. Marshall coughed up: >>> Thomas G. Marshall coughed up: >>>> I've been ready to make my changes to my cig. lighter from ignition >>>> to "always on", and I discovered something semi disturbing before I >>>> made the changes. >>>> >>>> Between the positive and negative terminals of the cigarette >>>> lighter (pos is center, and ground/neg is shell) I'm expecting 0 >>>> resistance. >> >> >> In my haste, I goofed that up of course. I'm expecting infinite >> resistance, >> and instead and receiving 8. (?), which indicates /some/ sort of >> connection >> between the two. > > What reading do you get with the ignition in the on/run position? > > Some circuits rather than going open when off, go to ground when off. > Very important distinction to know to look for when in the business > of installing alarms and such. Well, ...... The fuse is /pulled/. A friend of mine said that cars "in the old days but perhaps still" used to put capacitors in between the pos and neg of various places in the car to act as voltage regulators, to smooth out the spikes and valleys. He's saying that might be supplying the resistance. He also said something I already knew, that 8 Ohms is suspicious, because it's the resistance of most speakers. Any clue here? -- Everythinginlifeisrealative.Apingpongballseemssmal luntilsomeoneramsitupyourn ose. |
#6
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"Thomas G. Marshall" . com>
wrote in message news:kiAed.679$PZ4.148@trndny07... > Seth coughed up: >> "Thomas G. Marshall" >> . com> wrote in >> message news:g4Aed.677$PZ4.660@trndny07... >>> Thomas G. Marshall coughed up: >>>> Thomas G. Marshall coughed up: >>>>> I've been ready to make my changes to my cig. lighter from ignition >>>>> to "always on", and I discovered something semi disturbing before I >>>>> made the changes. >>>>> >>>>> Between the positive and negative terminals of the cigarette >>>>> lighter (pos is center, and ground/neg is shell) I'm expecting 0 >>>>> resistance. >>> >>> >>> In my haste, I goofed that up of course. I'm expecting infinite >>> resistance, >>> and instead and receiving 8. (?), which indicates /some/ sort of >>> connection >>> between the two. >> >> What reading do you get with the ignition in the on/run position? >> >> Some circuits rather than going open when off, go to ground when off. >> Very important distinction to know to look for when in the business >> of installing alarms and such. > > Well, ...... The fuse is /pulled/. Yes, I understand the fuse is pulled, but what I don't know is if the fuse is before or after the control relay. The fuse could be before the control relay, and if the control relay goes to ground when off, you would still get a "shorted" reading with the fuse in or out. > A friend of mine said that cars "in the old days but perhaps still" used > to > put capacitors in between the pos and neg of various places in the car to > act as voltage regulators, to smooth out the spikes and valleys. I think that went away a while ago as everything went to more modern electronics which have that built in per device. > He's saying that might be supplying the resistance. He also said > something > I already knew, that 8 Ohms is suspicious, because it's the resistance of > most speakers. Possibly just an RF reading. What do you get if you do your same test, but instead of using the casing of the cig lighter as ground, get your ground elsewhere? Maybe read your pos at the cig lighter, and ground at the fuse panel or battery (provided your leads are long enough). Also, maybe be an obvious question, you are "zeroing out" your ohm meter before taking readings? > Any clue here? Really, all I would do in a case like what you are trying to achieve is take a 12ga wire, put a 15amp fuse on it (within 6" of source end), a female spade plug and plug it into one of the BATT connectors at the fuse panel and run the other end to the pos connector of the cig lighter, capping off the current pos wire at the cig lighter. Wire tie the new wire out of the way under the dash and be done with. When it is time to restore the car to stock, just cut the wire ties, remove the wire and plug the original plug back into the back of the cig lighter. |
#7
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hello, i dont really understand perfectly what you measuring but it sounds
like you are measuring the resistance of two wires that will be 12pos when the ignition is turned on. my first guess is that they have some kind of resistor in series with the cigerette lighter to reduce the current, perhaps the lighter by its self draws too much current. also, maybe some how you are measuring the internal resistance of the battery. are you measuring this resistance on a live set of wires? im guessing they have some kind of resistor in the circuit to reduce current to the lighter. |
#8
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Seth coughed up:
> "Thomas G. Marshall" > . com> wrote in > message news:kiAed.679$PZ4.148@trndny07... >> Seth coughed up: >>> "Thomas G. Marshall" >>> . com> wrote in >>> message news:g4Aed.677$PZ4.660@trndny07... >>>> Thomas G. Marshall coughed up: >>>>> Thomas G. Marshall coughed up: >>>>>> I've been ready to make my changes to my cig. lighter from >>>>>> ignition to "always on", and I discovered something semi >>>>>> disturbing before I made the changes. >>>>>> >>>>>> Between the positive and negative terminals of the cigarette >>>>>> lighter (pos is center, and ground/neg is shell) I'm expecting 0 >>>>>> resistance. >>>> >>>> >>>> In my haste, I goofed that up of course. I'm expecting infinite >>>> resistance, >>>> and instead and receiving 8. (?), which indicates /some/ sort of >>>> connection >>>> between the two. >>> >>> What reading do you get with the ignition in the on/run position? >>> >>> Some circuits rather than going open when off, go to ground when >>> off. Very important distinction to know to look for when in the >>> business of installing alarms and such. >> >> Well, ...... The fuse is /pulled/. > > Yes, I understand the fuse is pulled, but what I don't know is if the > fuse is before or after the control relay. The fuse could be before > the control relay, and if the control relay goes to ground when off, > you would still get a "shorted" reading with the fuse in or out. > >> A friend of mine said that cars "in the old days but perhaps still" >> used to >> put capacitors in between the pos and neg of various places in the >> car to act as voltage regulators, to smooth out the spikes and >> valleys. > > I think that went away a while ago as everything went to more modern > electronics which have that built in per device. > >> He's saying that might be supplying the resistance. He also said >> something >> I already knew, that 8 Ohms is suspicious, because it's the >> resistance of most speakers. > > Possibly just an RF reading. What do you get if you do your same > test, but instead of using the casing of the cig lighter as ground, > get your ground elsewhere? Maybe read your pos at the cig lighter, > and ground at the fuse panel or battery (provided your leads are long > enough). > > Also, maybe be an obvious question, you are "zeroing out" your ohm > meter before taking readings? > >> Any clue here? > > Really, all I would do in a case like what you are trying to achieve > is take a 12ga wire, put a 15amp fuse on it (within 6" of source > end), a female spade plug and plug it into one of the BATT connectors > at the fuse panel and run the other end to the pos connector of the > cig lighter, capping off the current pos wire at the cig lighter. > Wire tie the new wire out of the way under the dash and be done with. > > When it is time to restore the car to stock, just cut the wire ties, > remove the wire and plug the original plug back into the back of the > cig lighter. Well thanks for your considerate replies. I will try some of your suggestions, but I proceeded with my installation anyway. Hopefully my car won't burn to the ground overnight. At least my garage is a detached one..... What I've done for my changes are to remove the 10A fuse from the cig. slot, connect the always on options blade with a wire with an inline fuse (the same 10A) to a mini-blade (I concocted from a real blade) that I inserted directly into the cig fuse slot at the side that goes directly to the cig lighter. The idea being that I'm reusing the same wiring as before, just powering it differently at the fuse box. Interesting, perhaps this sheds some light, and TELL ME IF IT MEANS I SHOULD UNDO THIS, but a relay clicks on the moment I connected the always on. New questions: 1. Could the presence of this relay be part of the reason there was a measurable 8 ohms? 2. Is it ok for a car relay to be "on" all the time? You have been exceedingly helpful. I'll let you know if this works long term, or if disaster occurs {shudder}, or if the battery dies. -- Forgetthesong,I'dratherhavethefrontallobotomy... |
#9
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lamont1 coughed up:
> hello, i dont really understand perfectly what you measuring but it > sounds like you are measuring the resistance of two wires that will > be 12pos when the ignition is turned on. my first guess is that they > have some kind of resistor in series with the cigerette lighter to > reduce the current, perhaps the lighter by its self draws too much > current. also, maybe some how you are measuring the internal > resistance of the battery. are you measuring this resistance on a > live set of wires? > im guessing they have some kind of resistor in the circuit to reduce > current to the lighter. The hot lead to the cig is connected to an empty fuse location (open circuit). The ground lead to the cig is connected to the car ground. I'm not sure what the heck is in-between the two that would somehow connect them together, even "a little bit", other than something wired in /parallel/ somewhere. -- Forgetthesong,I'dratherhavethefrontallobotomy... |
#10
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"Thomas G. Marshall" . com> wrote in message
news:UkCed.597$803.29@trndny04... > lamont1 coughed up: > > hello, i dont really understand perfectly what you measuring but it > > sounds like you are measuring the resistance of two wires that will > > be 12pos when the ignition is turned on. my first guess is that they > > have some kind of resistor in series with the cigerette lighter to > > reduce the current, perhaps the lighter by its self draws too much > > current. also, maybe some how you are measuring the internal > > resistance of the battery. are you measuring this resistance on a > > live set of wires? > > im guessing they have some kind of resistor in the circuit to reduce > > current to the lighter. > The hot lead to the cig is connected to an empty fuse location (open > circuit). The ground lead to the cig is connected to the car ground. > I'm not sure what the heck is in-between the two that would somehow connect > them together, even "a little bit", other than something wired in /parallel/ > somewhere. The 8-Ohm sounds like a relay. Your CRV's cigarette lighter is most likely powering an accessory relay of some sort. To find out, disconnect the cigarette lighter power at the fuse panel. Then try to operate the suspected accessory. I've read a few post back regarding an individual who had tried your method but end up with a drained battery a few weeks later... Locate the relay and rewire it, or let it defy how you intended to wire it. |
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