Just to answer your question, a fuseable link looks like the one in your picture.I will have to try this. Where is the fuseable link located?
OK, get this. I only connected the positive wire to the battery and got a meter reading at the battery and the starter relay??? What the heck is going on?
Clean the battery box or temporarily put a non conductive material under the battery and try that again. The battery hold down is not shorted on a battery post?OK, get this. I only connected the positive wire to the battery and got a meter reading at the battery and the starter relay??? What the heck is going on?
Glovebox light, trunk light? Alternator shorted internally thru a diode?
Clean the battery box or temporarily put a non conductive material under the battery and try that again. The battery hold down is not shorted on a battery post?
Just to answer your question, a fuseable link looks like the one in your picture.
View attachment 750402
If that wire even goes there, it needs replaced by the looks of it. Its all frayed up at the bulkhead connection.
To test one, you use your ohms meter to see if current flows through it.
Could you try re-wording this.
I would think that might burn the fusible link before the relay. That's what the link is for. Just like a fuse, it will melt at a much lower temp. Just grab the fusible link and flex it. If it's good, it will feel like any other wire (some resistance), but if it has melted, all you have left is the insulation and will be very flexible.Well, I thought I found the problem, my two wires where they are crimped was touching each other on the starter. I moved them apart but still have the same problem. Do you think something like that could have toasted the starter relay?
I would think that might burn the fusible link before the relay. That's what the link is for. Just like a fuse, it will melt at a much lower temp. Just grab the fusible link and flex it. If it's good, it will feel like any other wire (some resistance), but if it has melted, all you have left is the insulation and will be very flexible.
If I have both terminals of the battery connected the battery goes dead because something is drawing the power. If I only connect the positive terminal then I get a meter reading at the battery and starter relay which I don't get when both terminal are connected.
If you're getting a meter reading, I'm thinking you are using the meter to complete the circuit with the negative terminal being disconnected.
If you're getting a meter reading, I'm thinking you are using the meter to complete the circuit with the negative terminal being disconnected.
Well tonight I got the starter out and hooked up the battery, no draw and everything worked! The starter was bad and causing the parasitic draw! I was surprised that a starter could draw that much amperage, when I hooked up the terminals it would spark real bad. Thank you to all the people that helped me figure it out! By going by your suggestions I found the problem!
How did that happen? There should be no juice to the windings till the starter solenoid engages.
Great news! You still need to address the rest of the wiring in your car though. Sure would hate to hear you had a fire.