HOW TO USE A DIGITAL MULTIMETER ON A CAR BATTERY

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  • Опубликовано: 13 июн 2021
  • Learn how to use a digital multimeter on a car battery. Understand how to get accurate voltage readings to diagnose if your car battery is healthy or not.
    Learn what could be the possible reasons for a faulty battery and tips on how to keep your car battery in good shape. Also learn about-
    - the DC setting on a multimeter and how to choose the correct setting to test your car battery which is 20V DC, as opposed to 200V DC or 600V DC
    - battery corrosion and how to clean your car battery terminals with sand paper or a terminal cleaner
    - the red and black leads on a multimeter and where to connect them on your car battery
    - how the cells and plates in a car battery can be damaged by too much vibration
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    #Caliber8Tools #voltmeter #carbattery
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Комментарии • 76

  • @fuzzresponder2225
    @fuzzresponder2225 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for sharing! 👍

  • @denzilpennels77
    @denzilpennels77 Год назад

    Some good solid practical sobering advice that we neglect to follow when owing a car 🚗

  • @100yearsofwealth
    @100yearsofwealth 3 года назад

    nice meeting you yesterday bro! good content!!

  • @darrylm3627
    @darrylm3627 Год назад +2

    Good Stuff,Great Tips😄👍🏿

  • @rabidclean
    @rabidclean 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks so much for this video! It helped me a lot, I'd never used a multimeter before and the manual did not do a good job helping to explain how to use it on a car battery.

    • @Caliber8Tools
      @Caliber8Tools  7 месяцев назад

      Glad it helped.

    • @rabidclean
      @rabidclean 7 месяцев назад

      @@Caliber8Tools Using your guide when my car wouldn't start, I found out my car is running at 14.4volts but with the car off the battery says 10.4. I took it out and hooked it up to a charger, hope that does the trick!

  • @jefflebowski918
    @jefflebowski918 Год назад +1

    Excellent video!

  • @wyattandjosie
    @wyattandjosie 2 года назад +1

    Great video.

    • @Caliber8Tools
      @Caliber8Tools  2 года назад

      Glad it helped. Btw the black lead should be connected to the common jack.

  • @josemgonzalez5395
    @josemgonzalez5395 Год назад

    Muy buena información.Gracias.

  • @willardfraser5477
    @willardfraser5477 Год назад

    It's very simple thank you for that reminder of how to test my battery

  • @jimbarron8619
    @jimbarron8619 2 месяца назад

    Great video and very helpful

  • @moamsterdam2012
    @moamsterdam2012 10 месяцев назад

    tank you, very helpful

  • @peculiarthings
    @peculiarthings Год назад +4

    Thanks for the video. You're the only one that explained this well on RUclips that I've seen. Plus your hands didn't get in the way and we could see how you connected the probes to the battery.

  • @YTLuc
    @YTLuc Год назад +2

    Thank you very much for this excellent tutorial. I suffered doubts after watching so many multimeter tutorials that failed to help me comprehend the task of reading a car battery until I found your video. Thanks!

  • @kevinleach9631
    @kevinleach9631 2 месяца назад

    Excellent video thanks

    • @Caliber8Tools
      @Caliber8Tools  2 месяца назад

      Glad it helped.

    • @kevinleach9631
      @kevinleach9631 2 месяца назад

      @@Caliber8Tools lol it’s been so long since I’ve used mine and needed to check my marine batteries and foregot what setting I wanted it ! Faster than reading direction😂

  • @martinflores1022
    @martinflores1022 3 года назад +7

    You had the black lead cable in the wrong port. Should have been connected to the com port

    • @Caliber8Tools
      @Caliber8Tools  3 года назад +1

      Appreciate the great observation skills.

  • @juanalejandro9877
    @juanalejandro9877 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for the great video. Keep making them.

  • @parappasanshi1568
    @parappasanshi1568 Год назад +1

    👍Thank you

  • @singncarpenter6270
    @singncarpenter6270 Год назад +1

    Very helpful.Thank you. I have that same multi meter and I didn't know about the dropping below 10 volts when starting trick. I was also using the center port for my ground wire. I'm not sure if that matters.

    • @Caliber8Tools
      @Caliber8Tools  Год назад +1

      Glad it helped. The negative cable should plug into the ‘COM’ port on the meter.

    • @inkey2
      @inkey2 6 месяцев назад

      wait, now I am confused. In the video you do not have any cable plugged into the COM port of your meter. Did you mean the OHMS port because thats where you have it plugged in on the video here. I hope you answer me because I am trying to see if I have an electrical problem in my charging system.@@Caliber8Tools

    • @metzmatu8409
      @metzmatu8409 Месяц назад +1

      The black cable that goes to the negative terminal should be at the com port.

  • @capoleader3793
    @capoleader3793 Год назад +2

    This was excellent very useful content thank you!

  • @ferndog1461
    @ferndog1461 Год назад +2

    Thank you. Just remember, its clean & bare metal to metal for the battery cables to the battery posts. If you are spreading Dielectric grease or CRC battery protector as a way to protect against corrision, make the application after connecting cables and posts.
    For the spray on , Protector, product, Its a light spray. Too much, and it may seep into post and make a film that reduces good contact.

  • @sjfarish
    @sjfarish Год назад +1

    Thank you! A refresher is always needed when you get older like me.

  • @abdulbeany1894
    @abdulbeany1894 9 месяцев назад

    Hi my car is reading 14.1v when engine running but when i put everything on lights heaters blowers a/c radio etc the voltage drops 13 to 13.3v is alternator faulty thanks

  • @coloradolivingoffgrid6106
    @coloradolivingoffgrid6106 2 года назад

    Why wouldn't you put the dial on 9v where the battery icon since it's a battery and the normal value of 12.x is closer to 9 than the 20 you selected? Thanks.

    • @Caliber8Tools
      @Caliber8Tools  2 года назад +1

      We need to look at the VDC portion of the scale because we are checking for volts. 20V is the lowest value on the scale and we don’t need anything higher. The voltage will exceed 9 or 12 when we start the car but it won’t go past 20v.

    • @karenkrohn8003
      @karenkrohn8003 6 месяцев назад

      You are essentially choosing the upper limit of the scale with which you will be measuring your battery voltage, so you need to choose a number greater than the one you expect, but not so great that you'll only see a rough estimate. Too low an upper limit, and your reading will peg at that lower level, so in your example of 9v, you might see the number 9 briefly before it then shows L, even though your battery reads 12.6 when you switch to the 20 level. Think of putting a conventional speedometer in a race car. If it can read only 0-90, and your racecar is going 120 mph down the track, that speedometer would still read only 90 mph. Be careful with the settings of your multimeter, as when doing other kinds of tests you can blow out your multimeter by choosing too low a setting. When in doubt, start too high and then progress to lower settings as needed.

  • @tysunbrewhere7519
    @tysunbrewhere7519 2 года назад

    Thanks bro never knew how to use a multimeter. I just put a new battery in my 2015 Yamaha r1 and 2 days later it’s dead. Does anyone know why? I checked all fuses no blown fuses and I didn’t even ride the bike with new battery just started it a couple times now I have no power.

    • @Caliber8Tools
      @Caliber8Tools  2 года назад +1

      Any time. Could have been a faulty battery already.

    • @Schnellanie
      @Schnellanie Год назад

      I hope you got it resolved, could've been parasitic drain where something still uses energy even when the car is turned off.

  • @carolstott533
    @carolstott533 2 года назад +2

    You have your negative cable in the wrong port. This should be in the common.

  • @elikhuman3778
    @elikhuman3778 3 месяца назад

    Is 13.06 while the engine is running okay?

  • @henryparrott2447
    @henryparrott2447 2 года назад +1

    👍

  • @juanmigoyo3429
    @juanmigoyo3429 Месяц назад

    My problem is nobody ever demonstrates where to plug in the red and black wires on the meter

    • @Caliber8Tools
      @Caliber8Tools  Месяц назад

      ruclips.net/video/SJgGuMrQj9M/видео.html

  • @2020HotShotTruckingLLC
    @2020HotShotTruckingLLC 7 месяцев назад +1

    Pro tip - edit the audio track of the music you added for your intro. I typically use about -15 DB so the end result is the same audio level as my commentary. Each piece of music you add needs to checked before you compile the video for upload. That might reduce the amount of your viewers skipping your intro, or the whole video... nobody likes blaring music or commercials when they have their volume set to hear what your message is.

  • @imammaarifarif4388
    @imammaarifarif4388 Год назад

    Hai Gentleman

  • @romantheman1227
    @romantheman1227 2 года назад

    Well Hello!! My battery is dead..how am I going to start it and if my car is starting why would I bother checking my battery??!

    • @Caliber8Tools
      @Caliber8Tools  2 года назад

      It may not be totally dead. You can try to jump it or use a volt meter to check it.

    • @vambo13257
      @vambo13257 2 года назад

      could also be in the ignition switch, linkage, solenoid, starter ect. Start with the basics

    • @veei4762
      @veei4762 Год назад

      Because you can still test it in its dead state also some cars start then die so that would be a other reason you'd utilize this gadget

  • @MartinProavis
    @MartinProavis 7 месяцев назад

    13.8V je málo...

  • @danc2014
    @danc2014 Год назад +4

    The meter connection is wrong. Black lead is always in the common connection. As a result if you set or measure something incorrect , you have no protection in the meter and it can be damaged.

    • @Hustler_state
      @Hustler_state Год назад

      Meter connection looked accurate to me. What ground is the common ground younspeak of? I'm mechanically inclined and electrically a Delbert and it's so frustrating.

    • @Hustler_state
      @Hustler_state Год назад

      Why isn't this melting his wires? Like introducing to test a dewalt 20v battery and my wires melted instantly and yes it was a very cheap multimeter

    • @victoriagirdler4795
      @victoriagirdler4795 10 месяцев назад +1

      If you have your test lead in Amp fused port, you have to test a certain way. Thats to test the ampers of the current through your circuit. You have to remove a wire in your circuit to do this, somewhere make your DMM part of the circuit you're testing. If you use this setting improperly, the fuse in the DMM should blow. If it's cheap, that might not have happened. If you use it above 10 amps, you're risking it even more. The only setting you should use a DMM on to test your car battery is DCV. That measures Voltage supplied by source, your battery. You can check resistances of any load you have in your car (so sensors, fuses, wires, etc) but you have to remove Voltage & shut off what you're testing or remove to bench test. High resistance can cause unexpected Voltage drop in your circuit. Low resistance can let too much through. But simply for your car battery your in DCV, & the black in comm & the red in the one with the V&Ohms symbol.

  • @bombfirst157
    @bombfirst157 Год назад

    The black cables not even in the right hole. Lucky the thing didn’t blowup and screw up your battery