FI Spyder wrote:If it's internal it won't read anything.
Yeah I know, but I was meaning that a very small load (in the micro amps range) wouldn't drain the battery anymore than an the natural losses from a battery just sat there with nothing connected to it.
UKPhilTR7 wrote:Last night I went and checked the reading inline again, this time on 200m. There was nothing on the meter, not even a flicker. <snip> All signs are pointing to the battery on its way out.
If your meter doesn't show any draw on the milliamp scale two things spring to mind...
1) is the meter working on that scale or have you blown the meters internal fuse ?
2) if your meters working then it's unlikely to be a vampire drain that is flattening your battery, the best thing to do next would be a "drop test", fully charge the battery and then take it to your local friendly garage and ask them to test it. Try to avoid places like Halfrauds & Kwikfit as they will almost certainly say you battery is knackered and then try to sell you a new one (even if your battery is okay)
If you want to simulate a drop test at home, disconnect the power to the coil (so the car won't start) then switch everything on you can and then get your glamous assistant to crank the engine while you measure the battery voltage with your meter, anything below 10.5 volts is suspect especially if it reads lower and lower the longer you crank the engine for. I wouldn't do it for more than 30-40 seconds because your starter really won't like it and will get very hot in the process.