Shop Press

Shop Press is the news and idea hub for everything related to working on cars and trucks, focusing on repair, technology, and wrenching lifestyle.

From the creative minds at:

FEATURE STORY

Hot Off the Press

Tariff Talk: A Look Backwards at The Chicken Tax

Well, the mood’s been a little heavy with all the talk about tariffs as of late. There’s an automotive tax that’s been around for a long time that is a perfect thing to mention if a conversation is getting uncomfortable. And if you’re a car nut, you should at least...

Watch This Video on the Inventor Who Put Lead in Gasoline

Recently, I went down an internet rabbit hole about why gasoline once had lead in it and how it got removed. In my searches, I found this video on inventor Thomas Midgley Jr., who not only invented leaded gasoline to combat engine knocking but also synthesized...

The Tightwad’s Way To Install Any Wheel Bearing Race

I don’t own a bearing race driver kit, and I haven’t in 20 years of fixing stuff. I also refuse to use sockets to drive a race. I learned a method a long time ago I’ll pass along to you newer techs: I use the race I’m replacing. I primarily have used this trick when...

Shop Profile: Locked N Loaded 4×4

I’ve owned two Jeeps–the 1973 Super Jeep CJ-5 featured in a previous Shop Press article, and a 2010 Wrangler Sahara. The reliability and my enjoyment of the former wasn’t “super” in any way despite American Motors’ best efforts at model name puffery, and the latter...

Stress Test Vehicle Grounds

by | Apr 17, 2025

Pop quiz, no cheating: how many amps does the ground side of any circuit conduct?

If you said, “As many as the hot side,” get yourself a gold star and skip this article. For the rest of us who weren’t born innately knowing the answer to that question, stick with me for a moment here while I point out a few things about modern vehicles.

  • Most non-truck vehicles are no longer body-on-frame and haven’t been for a long time
  • Sheet metal on the body has become progressively thinner to reduce vehicle weight and cost
  • Body panels aren’t always welded in place any more—many are affixed with adhesive
  • Composite panels, using layers of plastic or fiber are often employed to save weight, reduce road noise, absorb energy in crashes, and permit complex shapes that can’t be achieved in steel

If you fix jalopies for a living, you can see where I’m going with this. I am guilty of having assumed a good ground in a circuit, and I bet you are too. Oh, I might have whipped out my meter and spun the dial to the audible continuity tone and verified I got a little beepy-doo, and I might even have tested the resistance. But one little strand of copper hanging in there sometimes passed those tests with flying colors and yet left circuits unable to function reliably.

As a young mechanic, I was taught to inspect and clean all grounds when I had an electrical problem on my hands, and I think that’s good advice. But it ain’t great advice: Nowadays, I hatehatehate changing things in any system without measuring and testing them before and after a change.

I test my grounds before I clean or tighten a dang thing and I suggest you do, too. That way, if that was the problem, you can say so empirically.

Water pumps are often replaced because of a little coolant loss at the weep hole.

Nothing fancy here that can’t be plucked from the donor car out back. Photo: Lemmy.

Here you can see a test rig I’ve stuck together from new parts; I really splashed out. You can, of course, duplicate this thing from scrap parts for peanuts. This is a test light in a sense, but you’ll notice this one is a halogen, and that’s because this is in effect a cheap load tester. You know why we use battery load testers; meters don’t tell the whole story. Circuits are no different.

I got this bulb wired up to the high beam filament in an H4/9003 headlight bulb. Let’s do some back-of-the-napkin math: Nominally, that’s a 60 watt load running on roughly a 12 volt system, and while we can’t directly convert that, we can rough that out to about five amps. (What’s an amp or two between friends?) The 16 and 18 gauge wires that snake around most vehicles should easily handle a five amp load at the lengths found in most auto wiring harnesses.

So now we have a way to stress-test a ground circuit before cleaning or tightening a single thing. Clip the hot side on the battery, and then grab your test lead and test the exact ground path your malfunctioning component is using. Light wonky or not working at all? Bingo, you’re on the case. And if not, no biggie, but at least now 50% of the circuit has been ruled out definitively.

A thing I like about good ol’ fashioned burnin’ filaments is that they respond visually to changes in the circuit, so this is also a half-decent fault-finder, too. You could unhook the tester that isn’t lighting up and start disassembling the ground side of the circuit—but you could also have the lube rack kid hold the bulb and both of you could observe it flickering as you start feeling and moving things, helping you isolate the area of the mechanical fault causing the electrical problem. (You should do that, too. Everyone’s mean to the lube rack kid, but he needs some of the smarts between your ears to feed his family, too.)

If you haven’t been load-testing the other half of the circuit, now you can quickly and easily. While you’re paying attention to the poor neglected minus sign, I might also encourage you to check out this oldie but goodie from colleague Pete with some more intel on why the “meter on the chassis bolt” isn’t a definitive test.

The articles and other content contained on this site may contain links to third party websites. By clicking them, you consent to Dorman’s Website Use Agreement.

Related Articles

Shop Press Comment Policy

Participation in this forum is subject to Dorman’s Website Terms & Conditions. Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline feedback
View all comments

Get Articles In Your Inbox

Subscribe to receive a monthly email summary of our latest Shop Press stories.

Shop Press

I agree to the above privacy statement and T&Cs

Thanks! You're now subscribed.