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New 12V battery discharges after two days

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by swede70, Apr 8, 2020.

  1. swede70

    swede70 Junior Member

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    Update
    This morning I had a voltage of 12,08V and a current of 1,27A, with all fuses in, all doors closed and locked, FOB away.
    Then I pulled the ”AMP” fuse and following records were made:
    0min: 12,27V, 0,022A
    60min: 12,35V, 0,023A
    All doors closed and locked.

    I saw a circuit diagram and the ”AMP” fuse is for the sound system, but I dont know if there is a fault in the amplifier (under the seat) or if it is somewhere else. I guess I have to dig deeper in this..

    //Swede70
     
  2. swede70

    swede70 Junior Member

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    Another update.
    I disconnected the amplifier under the seat and connected the ”AMP” fuse. Resulting in 0,022A after locked doors.
    Must be the amplifier thats faulty?

    //Swede70
     
    Mendel Leisk likes this.
  3. sam spade 2

    sam spade 2 Senior Member

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    It depends.....on what is supposed to shut the power OFF to the amp when the car goes off.
    My guess is that the amp itself is not responsible for doing that.

    If it is an after-market amp that's been added, maybe the installer wired it wrong.
     
  4. swede70

    swede70 Junior Member

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    No, its not an aftermarket, its the original
     
  5. dolj

    dolj Senior Member

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    Possibly or maybe the amplifier unit is not getting the power-off signal from the head-unit. Did you try plugging the amp back in after you unplugged, just in case pulling the power on it reset something?

    The other thing to try is to turn the audio off before turning the car off.

    If none of that makes a difference, then you are probably correct thinking the amplifier unit is faulty.
     
  6. swede70

    swede70 Junior Member

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    Ok, thanks. I will try that tomorrow

    //Swede70
     
  7. swede70

    swede70 Junior Member

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    Update again.
    I plugged in the amplifier again while measuring the current from the battery. As I plugged the amplifier in the current increased from 20 mA to 1,3A. Then I switched the engine on, but the head unit was off. Then my multimeter started to sound. Current was over the limit 10A. Then I turned the head unit on and was surprisingly hearing music! And the multimeter showed currents way over 10A. I shut everything off and could feel that my measuring cables was a bit warm.
    What do you guys think?

    //Swede70
     
  8. 2012 Prius v wagon 3

    2012 Prius v wagon 3 Active Member

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    No answers, but typically the wired current measurement on a multimeter will have a 10A slow blow fuse. So you can exceed that, maybe up to 20A, for up to 20 seconds or so before the fuse blows. So if you don't want to blow that multimeter fuse, ...

    Maybe the answer was given in a previous post, but why were you surprised to hear music?

    At this point, you have it fairly well isolated. Perhaps the easiest thing to check for is visually inspect the connectors - no corrosion that could be causing a short, bent pins, pinched wires where the seat may have done something, etc.

    Beyond that, if you're trying to confirm whether the fault is in the amp vs. the head unit, you could analyze and understand the whole circuit (may not be practical) or you could try swapping a different amp in there as a test. Any good friends with the same amp? Junkyards?
     
  9. sam spade 2

    sam spade 2 Senior Member

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    I think all the evidence points to your amp being bad.

    BUT....I also think it would be more than a little unusual for the amp itself to be responsible for shutting down when there is no signal coming in. Usually the power is removed by the main car shutting down via a relay probably.
     
  10. dolj

    dolj Senior Member

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    I think this confirms that you have traced the source of your current draw.
    To test the head unit, you only needed to put the car into ACC mode (one press of the Power button with foot OFF the brake; then, when you are ready, 2 more quick presses (again with foot OFF the brake) to turn off. In any case, going to any state of ON will increase current, and if you indeed put the car in READY, it will draw a significant amount in the initial start-up. The only real surprise is your Ammeter survived.

    What your testing has shown, is that the amplifier is drawing current even when the HU (head unit) is off. This might mean the amplifier is not receiving the "Off Signal" or not processing the "Off Signal", or the other reasons outlined by 2012 Prius v wagon 3, particularly inspecting the connectors - no corrosion that could be causing a short circuit, bent pins. These things could be stopping the signal from reaching the amplifier. I am making the assumption at this point that there is nothing else wrong with the amplifier other than it is failing to turn off as commanded.

    As ...
    ... this is good advice, and pretty much what I would have said.
    I also wonder why you surprised to hear music, was it because you assumed the problem meant the amplifier would not work. As you have seen, this is not necessarily the case.
     
    #30 dolj, Apr 17, 2020
    Last edited: Apr 17, 2020
  11. swede70

    swede70 Junior Member

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    Yes, I was suprised hearing music. Because with my experience, an amplifier not behaving ordinary is broken. But, after having reading several topics I do not know what to believe. It has not an ordinary ”Remote” to turn the amp on, only some kind of data-pulse?
    Well, I will investigate it further. But right now, I think I’m going to try with a relay controlled by a switch to turn the power on to the amp. The relay might be controlled by the ignition or something..

    //Swede70