Checking Ground-Providing Circuits
- The best method of checking ground circuits is to measure the circuit voltage drop during component operation (or attempted operation).
- An ohmmeter may be accurately used if the battery has been disconnected.
- Recommended practice: Expect less than 2 ohms for most small diameter (18 gauge and smaller) wires.
- Ohmmeter low-resistance resolution (approximately 0.1 ohm) limits its use to circuits carrying less than approximately 5 amperes (this is due to the fact that very small resistances, undetectable by a DMM, cause significant voltage loss in higher current circuits).
- DMM ohmmeter readings are easily corrupted by the normal voltage present (battery connected) in many ground circuits.
- Recommended practice: Reverse the leads and check for changes in the measurement. Reversing the DMM lead connections should never change the resistance measurement (unless the circuit contains a semi-conductor). Measurement (non-semi-conductor) differences when leads are interchanged at the test points indicate invalid test results. The presence of voltage corrupts the reading, and causes the meter reading to change when the leads are reversed.