Quote Originally Posted by willowbilly3
I have seen some cars with keep alive circuits that fade to a very small draw (clock for instance) when the battery is actually connected but will still light up the test light. Some stereos will do that too.
Very often I find the draw on a GM to be inside the alternator, shorted internal regulator I suppose. They can even still charge ok and do that.
Hi Willowbilly, Yup your right, an alt can show a draw for a couple of reasons, and if it does, it would or should, be very small. At least not large enough to kill a battery under normal use. But that is why I mentioned unplugging it so it wouldn't interfer with the test. Also, if a meter is used along with the test light, you can determine just how heavy the draw is. The one draw that gets a lot of people is when a diode on the trio goes bad. If you have an indicator light instead of a gauge in the dash you might catch it. It will glow real dim, so dim in fact that you can't see it in day light, but it will show if it's dark out. That one, can and will drain a battery, if a car sits for a few days. But the darn thing will allow the alt to appear to charge in a normal manner. As long as you drive it enough, you cover up the problem. Until it's parked at the airport for a week or two, or stored for a bit, and then it's, "hey, what happened, it was ok when I left it here?" This stuff pretty well has to be eliminated step by step, if you hop scotch around the system your more likely to miss it, if you do find it this way, it was likely pure luck. Not that there's anything wrong with being lucky, it just doesn't happen often enough. Sniper