C3 General General C3 Corvette Discussion not covered in Tech
Sponsored by:
Sponsored by:

Battery drainage

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Aug 7, 2007 | 06:18 PM
  #1  
77vetter's Avatar
77vetter
Thread Starter
Racer
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 289
Likes: 1
From: Valley Springs SD
Default Battery drainage

We went to the lake over the weekend and took our boat out for the first (and probably only time) this summer. We got home Monday afternoon and had finished cleaning up the boat and was ready to put it back in the garage. Instead of starting the vette up to move it 10 feet out of the way, I decided to put it in neutral and push it. That all worked fine, got the boat back into its corner and pushed the vette back in place. I got in the vette and took the keys out but apparently left it in neutral.

My wife and daughter were going to take the vette out today for lunch one last time before my daughter goes back to college. They got in and tried to start it but not so much as a grunt or groan from the starter - battery was bone dead! Did leaving the transmission in neutral do this or do I have other problems?
Reply
Old Aug 7, 2007 | 06:53 PM
  #2  
25th silverbullet's Avatar
25th silverbullet
Racer
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 343
Likes: 0
From: San Diego CA
St. Jude Donor '05-'07
Default

I am not an expert on Tranny's but do not think that leaving the car in neutral would drain the battery. I do this sometimes too (in the garage with the parking brake on) but usually I slap it up into 3rd after turning the car off.

I would suspect the car sits too much, the battery is bad, or a slew of other things before thinking neutral caused this.

Anyone else?
Reply
Old Aug 7, 2007 | 07:31 PM
  #3  
77vetter's Avatar
77vetter
Thread Starter
Racer
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Sep 2006
Posts: 289
Likes: 1
From: Valley Springs SD
Default

I didn't think leaving it in neutral would cause any problems either, but I had driven it on Thursday morning before we left for the weekend and everything was fine then. I usually drive it at least once every couple of weeks. This is the second time this has happened and it seems to me the previous time the car was in neutral as well. Is it possible that sometimes the interior lights may not shut off and that is what is causing the drainage? I do cover the car when not in use, but I think I would see the interior lights through the cover if they were on, but maybe with these long summer days it is not dark enough when I am in the garage to notice?
Reply
Old Aug 7, 2007 | 08:40 PM
  #4  
kingkohlmn's Avatar
kingkohlmn
Pro
15 Year Member
Veteran: Marine Corps
Liked
Loved
 
Joined: Mar 2007
Posts: 724
Likes: 112
From: Austin TX area
Default

I believe there is a neutral safety switch, which will prevent you from starting. I am not sure but I seem to recall some operational check, which is preformed at NCRS judging events. Not sure if this switch is on automatics or manuals also.
Reply
Old Aug 7, 2007 | 09:35 PM
  #5  
...Roger...'s Avatar
...Roger...
Race Director
 
Joined: May 2006
Posts: 16,528
Likes: 53
From: Dayton, Ohio
Default

Battery Drain Test-easy to do with pics

There seems to have been alot of battery drain issues lately.Thought I would write down this fairly easy way to check for battery drain and share it.All you need is an inexpensive 12 volt test light and a short piece of wire. A test light like this one will be very useful for other 12 volt electrical issues. Use a bulb type of test light for this test procedure not an LED type.

If you have a C3 and “DO NOT” have delayed courtesy lights and your courtesy lights work this is “my” way to check for battery drain Put both windows down and make sure everything is turned off. Disconnect the negative battery cable and put your 12-volt test light between the (-) battery terminal and the (-) battery cable. Here is a picture to help. With the driver’s door open the test light should be lit. Make sure everything is turned off and close the driver’s door. Wait several minutes (clock step). If the test light stays out completely (no low glow) you have no battery drain.
If the test light is on or even a low glow you have a drain on your battery. (bright bulb is heavy drain ,dim bulb is low drain) First thing I do is push on the doors and watch test light then lean in through the window and push on things with lights like the glove box door, visor light, map lights and the rear center compartment and watch to see if test light flickers or goes out if so you have found your drain. Second thing I do is open the drivers door and remove the courtesy light fuse, if the test light goes out then the drain is in the courtesy light circuit. If the light remains lit continue to remove fuses until the light goes out and that will be the circuit with the drain. If the test light doesn’t go out then the drain is in a circuit not protected by the fuse box.

“Clock step” Info-clocks can be a pain.
Above when you closed the door if the test light went out but came back on shortly afterwards it’s the clock trying to wind and its drawing too much. Disconnect the power to the clock and retest.

If you determine your draw is in the courtesy light circuit disconnect the power to the clock and retest. If this doesn’t eliminate the draw you can now move on to other items on the courtesy light circuit.

OVERNIGHT CLOCK TEST-I use this alot on mechanical clocks on cars that have intermittent power drains.Leave test light hooked up as above and let clock continue to run through the test light all night.If you come out in the morning and the light is off then the clock is in good shape.If the light is on the clock will have stopped and you should have the clock checked or replace it.


If you have a C3 and “HAVE” delayed courtesy lights and they work and turn off after 30 seconds this is “my” way to check for battery drain. Put both windows down and make sure everything is turned off. Disconnect the negative battery cable and put your 12-volt test light between the (-) battery terminal and the (-) battery cable. Here is a picture to help. With the driver’s door open the test light should be lit Make sure everything is turned off and close the driver’s door. The test light should still be lit because the delay relay is engaged. Now (and lets call this the “jumper” step) lean in through the driver’s window with a small piece of wire to use as a jumper (white wire in the pic.) connect the jumper from the (-) battery terminal to the (-) battery cable. Your courtesy lights will come on and the test light will go out --wait for your courtesy lights to go off --remove the jumper lead. Wait several minutes (clock step). If the test light stays out you have no battery drain. If the test light comes back on you have a drain on your battery. Just to be sure do the “jumper” step again to make sure the delay relay was off. If the test light came on again open the driver’s door and remove the courtesy light fuse, if the test light goes out then the drain is in the courtesy light circuit. If the light remains on continue to remove fuses until the light goes out and that will be the circuit with the drain. If the test light doesn’t go out then the drain is in a circuit not protected by the fuse box.

“Clock step” Info-clocks can be a pain. Above after you removed the jumper the test light went out but came back on shortly afterwards it’s probably the clock trying to wind and it’s drawing too much (plus it reset the delay relay). Disconnect the power to the clock and retest as above.

Interior light delay relay –The “jumper” step turns the relay off but the relay will reset and try to turn on the interior lights at the drop of a hat causing the test light to come back on. Any draw will reset it. If you find that removing the courtesy light fuse eliminates your battery draw then the “simplest” way to continue testing is to disconnect the delay relay. In the 5 wire connector you pull off the relay are 2 white wires- connect a jumper between them. This will make your car temporarily a “non-delayed interior light system”. Now you can test using the “DO NOT” have delayed courtesy lights procedure above. If you choose not to bypass the delay relay you will have to use the “jumper” step every time you trigger the relay.


Multimeter Testing—In my opinion you don’t need the multimeter to check for battery drain down to very acceptable levels. However if you want to use one in place of the test light you need a multimeter that will take a heavy amp draw or you will smoke your meter or blow the internal fuse and you must be on the amp.setting not volt setting.

Last edited by ...Roger...; Nov 1, 2009 at 05:20 PM.
Reply

Get notified of new replies

To Battery drainage





All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:09 PM.

story-0
Top 10 DOs and DON'Ts for Protecting Your Convertible Top!

Slideshow: How to Protect A Convertible Top: 10 DOs & DON'Ts

By Michael S. Palmer | 2026-04-03 00:00:00


VIEW MORE
story-1
Top 10 Most Explosive Corvettes Ever Made: Power-to-Weight Ratio Ranked!

Slideshow: The 10 most explosive Corvettes ever built based on power-to-weight ratio.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-05-20 07:23:03


VIEW MORE
story-2
150 hp to 1,250 hp: Every Corvette Generation Compared by the Specs That Matter

Slideshow: From C1 to C8 we compare every Corvette generation by the numbers.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-05-12 16:54:12


VIEW MORE
story-3
8 Coolest Corvette Pace Cars (and Replicas) of All Time

Slideshow: Some Corvette pace cars became collectible legends, while others perfectly captured the look and attitude of their era.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-05-11 09:50:51


VIEW MORE
story-4
Top 10 Corvette Engines RANKED by Peak Torque (70+ Years of Muscle!)

Slideshow: Ranking the top 10 Corvette engines by torque output.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-05-05 11:58:09


VIEW MORE
story-5
Corvette ZR1X Will Be Pacing the Indy 500, And Could Probably Race, Too!

Slideshow: A Corvette pace car nearly matching IndyCar speeds sounds exaggerated, until you look at the numbers.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-05-04 20:03:36


VIEW MORE
story-6
Top 10 Corvettes Coming to Mecum Indy 2026!

Among a rather large group of them.

By Brett Foote | 2026-05-04 13:56:44


VIEW MORE
story-7
Top 10 C9 Corvette MUST-HAVES to Fix These C8 Generation Flaws!

Slideshow: the top 10 things Corvette owners want in the C9 Corvette

By Michael S. Palmer | 2026-04-30 12:41:15


VIEW MORE
story-8
10 Revolutionary 'Corvette Firsts' Most People Don't Know

Slideshow: 10 Important Corvette 'firsts' that every fan should know.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-04-29 17:02:16


VIEW MORE
story-9
5 Reasons to Upgrade to an LS6-Powered Corvette; 5 Reasons to Stay LT2

Slideshow: Should you buy a 2020-2026 Corvette or wait for 2027?

By Michael S. Palmer | 2026-04-22 10:08:58


VIEW MORE