- Joined
- June 17, 2004
- Messages
- 24,568
- Reaction score
- 5,058
- City, State
- Knoxville, TN
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 98 Limited AWD 302
I'm not really going to dive into this with you guys except to say this: You really have to watch voltmeter readings if you start seeing weird mid-range values like 7-10V on a circuit without a load, like a relay coil socket. It has to do with the semiconductors on the computer outputs. If you put the slightest load on it, it may drop to zero volts. This is where a simple test light is superior to a voltmeter. I have... geez, at least 5 digital voltmeters, but I use a test light just as often. Just saying...
Good thought, weird voltage readings are "interesting."
I had a no start condition in a 302 swap in my old 86 Crown Vic. It had about 6-8 volts on the start circuit, and I had already been through the wiring, and had it nicely wrapped up. I decided to temporarily use a relay to power the circuit, using the existing voltage to trigger a relay I had(which triggered with that low voltage). I drove that car for four more years and sold it with 335k miles on it. I never got back to tracing that one wire, the relay worked fine.