bwringer
Well-known member
Like many tool-using primates who monkey with vehicles, I have a small collection of headlight and turn signal bulbs and sockets with wires hooked up to them.
The reason for this, of course, is that many, many vehicle electrical issues arise from insufficient current flow. If you test voltage, you might get a false good reading, but the second you place a load on the circuit, it fails. Usually corrosion, bad ground, or an almost-broken wire.
Is there a nice clean solution out there, or should I just stick to my semi-janky homemade versions with fragile exposed bulbs that burn my fingers?
If this is a real thing that exists, what the hell is it called?
I envision a wee box or test light sort of thing with two wires coming out of it. The black wire is longer and has a clamp for ground. The other wire is red and gets clamped or poked into the positive of the circuit you're testing. On the box is a switch or dial allowing one to select from assorted resistances or loads (0.5A up to 10A or higher?); maybe it switches between incandescent bulbs you can see (often bulb brightness or intermittence is crucial info, so physical light bulbs might be preferable), or there's some sort of resistor and heat sink arrangement with bulb and maybe a beeper.
If it's bulbs, the bulbs are protected so the bulbs don't break and you can't burn your fingers, but they're also replaceable.
I don't need a voltage readout, although that might be handy. I want to apply a chosen load, not measure resistance.
The reason for this, of course, is that many, many vehicle electrical issues arise from insufficient current flow. If you test voltage, you might get a false good reading, but the second you place a load on the circuit, it fails. Usually corrosion, bad ground, or an almost-broken wire.
Is there a nice clean solution out there, or should I just stick to my semi-janky homemade versions with fragile exposed bulbs that burn my fingers?
If this is a real thing that exists, what the hell is it called?
I envision a wee box or test light sort of thing with two wires coming out of it. The black wire is longer and has a clamp for ground. The other wire is red and gets clamped or poked into the positive of the circuit you're testing. On the box is a switch or dial allowing one to select from assorted resistances or loads (0.5A up to 10A or higher?); maybe it switches between incandescent bulbs you can see (often bulb brightness or intermittence is crucial info, so physical light bulbs might be preferable), or there's some sort of resistor and heat sink arrangement with bulb and maybe a beeper.
If it's bulbs, the bulbs are protected so the bulbs don't break and you can't burn your fingers, but they're also replaceable.
I don't need a voltage readout, although that might be handy. I want to apply a chosen load, not measure resistance.
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Then again, I guess that's within shouting distance of the ballpark of reasonable for a high-quality pro tool.