1. Attachments are working again! Check out this thread for more details and to report any other bugs.

What causes the voltage drop between the 12V and the jump post?

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by pasadena_commut, Mar 1, 2023.

  1. pasadena_commut

    pasadena_commut Senior Member

    Joined:
    May 2, 2019
    1,351
    409
    0
    Location:
    Southern California
    Vehicle:
    2007 Prius
    Model:
    N/A
    Why are the voltages at the jump post and the battery not the same?

    On our 2007 there is a roughly 0.2V drop between the voltage measured at the battery and the voltage measured under the hood at the jump post. This is with the car off, all the doors closed, no lights on, the car not having been run recently. In "ACC" mode (press Start only once, foot off the brake) the MFD voltage is the same as the jump post voltage (except with less accuracy, ie 12.1V on the MFD vs. 12.13V on a multimeter).

    In this test there is only the background current (around 20mA) coming out of the battery. That isn't enough to drop the battery voltage. Even if we were to assume a full 1 Ohm of resistance along that path (which would be pretty surprising if true), it would still be only a 20mV drop, not 200 mV. I don't believe there are any electronics in that circuit (like a rectifier), and the voltage drop across the big fuse should be negligible.

    Since the MFD and jump post measure the same, whatever causes this is between both of those locations and the positive battery post. Hmm, or maybe there is an anomalously high resistance in the path to ground? I recall long ago having tried to measure the voltage drop from the negative post to a bolt on the body near the battery, not the grounding point, and it was too small to measure. I have not tried to measure the voltage drop from the bolt head in the engine compartment I use for the jump post measurement to the ground point in the trunk. Again, there is only 20 mA current in play, so resistance seems unlikely to be the problem.
     
  2. edthefox5

    edthefox5 Senior Member

    Joined:
    Jul 25, 2007
    10,096
    4,795
    0
    Location:
    Clearwater, Florida
    Vehicle:
    2007 Prius
    Model:
    Two
    Voltage drop? Of course there is.

    Its a decent gauge wire about 12 feet long and 2 connections. Why are you sweating that? Battery issues? Voltage drop has nothing to do with that.
     
  3. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

    Joined:
    Jun 6, 2008
    7,569
    4,438
    7
    Location:
    Texas Hill Country
    Vehicle:
    2012 Prius v wagon
    Model:
    Three
    There are fuses and connectors in the positive circuit. Plus a much longer ground path with less than ideal metal to metal connections to the fuse box point of measurement.

    With the system off, the battery measurement is the reference.

    By the way, the mfd to jump point difference is resolution, not accuracy. Not that 200 mv matters in any case.
     
  4. edthefox5

    edthefox5 Senior Member

    Joined:
    Jul 25, 2007
    10,096
    4,795
    0
    Location:
    Clearwater, Florida
    Vehicle:
    2007 Prius
    Model:
    Two
    Yup.

    Thought for brevity I would spare him.

    Its the B+ post of the battery to the 100 amp fuse connection on one side of that 100 amp fuse then the other side of that fuse goes to the power plug connector then that connector connects to the #8 gauge wire itself and about 12 feet of that wire later its bolted to the front jump point under the hood.

    Its a long long way to Tipperary!

    You will indeed have a voltage drop. .2 volts is what I saw in my 07 bought new which is pretty good given the countryside.
     
  5. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

    Joined:
    Mar 30, 2008
    23,277
    15,074
    0
    Location:
    Indiana, USA
    Vehicle:
    2010 Prius
    Model:
    IV
    For a better idea of why the OP probably posed the question, work with the numbers a little.

    Absent any oddball things on that path like semiconductors with bandgaps, or junctions between different metals, the voltage drop is strictly equal to the current flowing on that path times the resistance of the path.

    The OP reports measuring a current of 20 mA and a voltage of 200 mV. That would imply the path (12 feet of decent gauge wire, 2 connections, and a fuse) has a resistance of 10 Ω.

    One way to ask whether that sounds plausible would be to look up the typical Ω/foot of decent gauge wire and the typical mΩ of the kind of connections and fuse used, and try to get that to add up anywhere near 10 Ω.

    A quicker way to ask whether that sounds plausible is to wonder what the voltage drop would then be when the car draws, say, an amp and a half.

    I'm thinking the OP still has a live question here.

    Of course I'd want to know a lot about exactly how the OP's measurements were made, before getting too deeply into it. But assuming the measurements are as reported and carefully made ... you might be able to talk me into thermoelectric / galvanic effects. There may be a few junctions of different metals on the paths the OP is measuring, and while being completely too lazy to look anything up at this hour, some little fraction of a volt isn't seeming to me completely out of the ballpark I might remember for those kinds of effects.

    Milli- and micro-ohmmeters sometimes come with manuals that remind you to take those kinds of effects into account when trying to measure very low resistance paths. Unless they are cheap offshore meters on eBay, in which case you're lucky if the manual's a page showing how the batteries go in.
     
  6. pasadena_commut

    pasadena_commut Senior Member

    Joined:
    May 2, 2019
    1,351
    409
    0
    Location:
    Southern California
    Vehicle:
    2007 Prius
    Model:
    N/A
    Exactly. The only way that much of a voltage drop makes sense with so little current is if there is some sort of junction between dissimilar materials. A Schottky diode can have a forward voltage drop in that range, but AFAIK only for signal level currents. There are power Schottky diodes which could survive in that path, which I have never worked with, which again AFAIK, have much larger forward voltage drops. I was wondering if there might be a triangle of diodes in play, so that current could only flow like: battery to post to inverter to battery, and not in the other direction. That might also explain why the Battery Tender Junior worked so poorly when attached at the post (two small voltage drops), but better when it was attached directly to the battery terminals (no voltage drops).

    The exact method was to use the probes from the UT210 meters in the following positions:

    1. At the battery: positive probe poked under the red cap to the outside of the clamp on the positive post, negative probe to the negative post or to the bolt at the end of the grounding strap. (I could not measure a difference between those two.)

    2. At the jump post: positive lead to the post, negative lead to the bolt immediately posterior to the top of the fuse box, on the curved sheet metal.

    The battery is currently out of the car. When it goes back I can get a piece of long wire and measure directly the voltage drop from the positive terminal to the jump post.
     
  7. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

    Joined:
    Jun 6, 2008
    7,569
    4,438
    7
    Location:
    Texas Hill Country
    Vehicle:
    2012 Prius v wagon
    Model:
    Three
    Measuring using two different references. EE101.
     
  8. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

    Joined:
    Mar 30, 2008
    23,277
    15,074
    0
    Location:
    Indiana, USA
    Vehicle:
    2010 Prius
    Model:
    IV
    Definitely no diodes on that path. Just copper wire, connectors, and a fuse.

    I get the sense that the OP has been around EE101, and is simply choosing not to handwave away an interesting question.

    If the two different references are two spots on the steel body used as the car's ground, and again the current flowing between those points is negligible, then what is proposed to account for the measured difference?

    Making a further test, using a long wire, could sharpen the question by identifying how much of the observed voltage difference is on the (mostly copper) + path, and how much is on the (mostly steel) path between the 'two different references". So I would suggest that, but in #6 OP has already thought of it.

    It could also be interesting to measure at the car right now, while the battery is currently out. Then there would clearly be zero current flowing (no more need to trust an ammeter), and any difference in voltage measurement would definitely not be a resistive "drop", and might instead be the sum of small batteries formed by dissimilar metals along the path.

    Last night I was too lazy to look anything up. Looking around briefly, there is this:

    How to avoid errors in low-voltage measurements

    and it does say "Thermoelectric voltages (or thermoelectric EMFs) are the most common sources of errors in low-voltage measurements." But the only thing it says there about the ballpark is "Temperature differentials in the test circuit, caused either by fluctuating temperatures in the lab or by a draft near the test circuit, can generate a few microvolts", which sounds several orders of magnitude too small. But maybe it involves some assumptions about the materials and environment inside a lab.

    There's also this, with more detail:

    Watch out for those thermoelectric voltages! - Fluke

    I have only kind of skimmed it. But I did see a table where the highest Seebeck coefficient they listed was the one for where copper is touching ... oxidized copper.

    I wonder if that happens much in a car.

    Even with that coefficient, though, it looks like you'd need a scalding temperature difference to raise 200 mV.
     
    #8 ChapmanF, Mar 2, 2023
    Last edited: Mar 2, 2023
  9. pasadena_commut

    pasadena_commut Senior Member

    Joined:
    May 2, 2019
    1,351
    409
    0
    Location:
    Southern California
    Vehicle:
    2007 Prius
    Model:
    N/A
    This car must have gremlins or evil spirits.

    With the battery out I measured the resistance from the bolt near the fuse box I was using for a ground to the battery grounding strap, completing the path with a length of wire. It came out to 0.9 Ohms (after subtracting the 0.2 Ohms for the wire). Not that I believe that measurement very much - to be accurate in that range the multimeter leads should have been more firmly attached, like screwed on. In any case, not a lot of resistance.

    Yesterday the battery was charged with a Battery Tender Junior, it started at 12.44V and ended at 13.12V (which was falling slowly once off the charger.) From solid red LED to solid green LED took 8 hours. In previous days I had tried to charge it up in the car, from the jumper post, and it always said it was done after an hour. It was charged oddly, like it was all surface charge, any load and it would drop dramatically and stay low. This time it seemed to actually be holding a charge. Let it sit overnight, and around noon attached it to a Harbor Freight 58759 "Viking" digital battery tester. Do I trust this unit? Not much, but figured it couldn't hurt outside the car, and it was inexpensive and one was available close by. Punched in the CCA of 320 and ran the "out of the car" battery test. Results:

    State of Health: 100%
    State of Charge: 100%
    measured CCA: 355
    Battery Volt: 12.75
    Internal R: 8.44 mOhm

    That internal resistance looks slightly high to me, but it isn't enough to account for the 0.2V drop when the measured current out of the battery is only around 20 mA. UT210 measured 12.76V right before the test, so those values agree. It's possible the CCA is really better than the rating in a 2 year old battery, or the measurement might be off. See "trust", above. The test is pretty quick, and this small device does not dissipate heat, so not a traditional load test.

    Put the battery back in and looked at the voltage at the post and at the positive battery post with the car off. They were the same. They were the same at the post when measured to the bolt I have been using or with a wire all the way back to the negative terminal. They were the same as each other in ACC and also in IG-ON (but of course each of these was less than the car off battery voltage).

    So taking the battery out, charging it, and putting it back in eliminated the 0.2V voltage difference which had been measured consistently before that. Why was it there in the first place, why did it go away after doing, well, pretty much nothing? Beats me. Gremlins or evil spirits.

    Because somebody might ask - I didn't see anything resembling corrosion or burns on the clamps to the posts or the posts themselves, and the clamps were both attached firmly, so that they would not rotate, before and after taking the battery out to charge it. The other connectors (the white ones which plug into the positive clamp and to the brake box next to it) were also clean. Probably irrelevant, but it was at least 20F warmer in the car today than the last several days.

    For future reference, current draw in ACC mode was around 2.3A (but oddly, because the car wasn't doing much, varied by .5A or so around that value) and in IG-ON mode, with the cabin fan, radio, and all lights off, it was 9.01A (and very stable at that value). The ACC voltage measurement on the MFD with the fully charged battery was 12.4V, corresponding to around 12.72V open circuit at the battery. IG-ON is not a good mode to check the battery voltage, as the current corresponds to ~.2C, which is enough to drop the battery voltage substantially, into a range where the battery looks iffy when it is not.
     
    CR94 likes this.
  10. CR94

    CR94 Senior Member

    Joined:
    Dec 2, 2014
    2,642
    1,134
    0
    Location:
    Northwestern S.C.
    Vehicle:
    2011 Prius
    Model:
    Two
    Interesting. In ACC state, I measured only 1.51A after it settled. 1.75A in ACC with radio on at moderate volume. 0.71A in OFF state with any door open and all interior lights off. This was in my 2011 3rd generation.
    I knew IG-ON would be higher current, but am surprised that it's that high. I haven't measured it.

    When I check battery voltage reported by my ScanGauge with the power switch in OFF state, it generally shows 0.2 or 0.3 volts lower than a digital meter on the battery. I've assumed that difference was an error in the ScanGauge, or IR drop in 12v wiring to and from the OBD port. However, it's coincidentally close to the 0.2V you reported to the under-hood jump terminal. Hmmm ...
     
  11. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

    Joined:
    Mar 30, 2008
    23,277
    15,074
    0
    Location:
    Indiana, USA
    Vehicle:
    2010 Prius
    Model:
    IV
    It's not a good mode to check open-circuit battery voltage, but it's a pretty good mode for checking how it looks under a reasonable load. It only looks iffy if you forget and compare the reading to an open-circuit voltage chart. So, don't do that. :)
     
  12. pasadena_commut

    pasadena_commut Senior Member

    Joined:
    May 2, 2019
    1,351
    409
    0
    Location:
    Southern California
    Vehicle:
    2007 Prius
    Model:
    N/A
    Under normal circumstances the battery would only be putting out (more than) 9A for a fraction of a second when the car turns on. After that it is all from the inverter. So IG-ON to load test the battery, albeit with a not entirely controllable load, but not really indicative of a normal operating state. Darn car turns things on and off at random times for a long time after the doors close!

    Interesting that a Gen 3 can sometimes show the 0.2V drop too. I wonder if CR94 were to unhook the battery for a few minutes if that drop would go away on that model too. Probably only to mysteriously return at some later time.

    The ACC voltage after 3 minutes was 12.4V before turning it off last night, but only 12.1V in ACC today (at entering the mode and for 3 minutes after once it settled). Perhaps the 0.2V drop has returned, or the 460mA parasitic load which I saw for a while, and which then disappeared, has returned. I'm not really feeling motivated to take the back apart again to find out today. After driving the car for a total of about 40 minutes afterwards, ACC was at 12.6V right after the journey ended, and was at 12.5V (with occasional 12.5V) at 3 minutes. So it certainly charges up OK. Will check after letting it sit for a long time and see if it falls again. Presumably an AGM battery in a normal Prius that is 12.3V when the car is turned off should still be 12.3V 12 hours later. .02A * 12 = .24Ah, out of 46Ah, shouldn't really be enough to move the needle. Conversely, .46A * 12 = 5.52Ah, which could easily drop it that much.
     
  13. pasadena_commut

    pasadena_commut Senior Member

    Joined:
    May 2, 2019
    1,351
    409
    0
    Location:
    Southern California
    Vehicle:
    2007 Prius
    Model:
    N/A
    Update on that Harbor Freight tester - some care is needed to make solid electrical connections. We just tried it on my son's truck, which has slightly corroded battery connectors and a 7 year old battery. It was clamped onto those connectors/cables rather than the posts, and it read it as 15% SOC. Changed it to the "front teeth" on the clamps instead of the "side teeth", and it went up to 53% SOC. I think this is probably because the alligator clips are not as big and hefty as one normally finds on a load tester, so the side ones don't "bite" through the surface contamination as well as the front ones. (Because more force on the teeth at the front than the ones at the side.) To detect this check the voltage at the posts with a voltmeter separately. If the voltages agree then it is a good connection, if not, then it isn't.

    This would not have affected the Prius battery test above as that was directly on the battery posts.