Hey guys, I know some of you will say that it is useless and waste of money, but I just think a little bit add a little bit.....will be come more and more. So I installed a grounding kit on my car, but I am not sure am I doing the right point, so if any of you know how please let me know or send me some picture for reference, thank you.
Here is my grounding kit.
My grounding kit
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- tescoking
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- Okibi
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Re: My grounding kit
I wouldn't have one going across the ignition lead.
If you had access to a car like this, would you take it back right away? Neither would I.
- tescoking
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Re: My grounding kit
Okibi wrote:I wouldn't have one going across the ignition lead.
Do you mean I should make the cable go around the rocket cover instead of just go on top of the spark plugs?
- david_syd_au
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Re: My grounding kit
You should find a route for the wire which doesn't involve it passing near the HT leads.
Having 2 wires close together, with one of them carrying high voltage pulses, can result in current being generated in the other wire through inductance
Best keep them apart.
Having 2 wires close together, with one of them carrying high voltage pulses, can result in current being generated in the other wire through inductance
Best keep them apart.
2011 NC LE "Black Beauty" (ours) | 2006 NC race car "Shazza" (his) | 1998 JDM NB race car "OMG" (hers) | NC Trailer
- tescoking
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Re: My grounding kit
david_syd_au wrote:You should find a route for the wire which doesn't involve it passing near the HT leads.
Having 2 wires close together, with one of them carrying high voltage pulses, can result in current being generated in the other wire through inductance
Best keep them apart.
Thanks for the suggestion, but am I installing them in the right spot?
- hks_kansei
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Re: My grounding kit
Ignoring my personal thoughts on grounding kits, it looks installed correctly.
As long as nothing is grounding to a positive wire/connector, and that the grounds are all to metal (ie: bare metal, not paint) it should be fine
As long as nothing is grounding to a positive wire/connector, and that the grounds are all to metal (ie: bare metal, not paint) it should be fine
1999 Mazda MX5 - 1989 Honda CT110 (for sale) - 1994 Mazda 626 wagon (GF's)
- tescoking
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Re: My grounding kit
hks_kansei wrote:Ignoring my personal thoughts on grounding kits, it looks installed correctly.
As long as nothing is grounding to a positive wire/connector, and that the grounds are all to metal (ie: bare metal, not paint) it should be fine
Isn't it suppose to install to some certain spot?
- hks_kansei
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Re: My grounding kit
tescoking wrote:Isn't it suppose to install to some certain spot?
Not to my knowledge. It shouldn't make a difference.
The concept of these kits is to make sure there is always a good direct ground between components, ie: direct from part to body.
The OEM system grounds most things to the engine block, then from that to the body (there's a ground strap on the back of the block that grounds to the firewall)
So the fancy kits ground say, the throttle body from the throttle, directly to the body. Where OEM is goes to the manifold, then the block, then the body.
My opinion is that the kits don't do anything except look messy, since the OEM ground is pretty good.
1999 Mazda MX5 - 1989 Honda CT110 (for sale) - 1994 Mazda 626 wagon (GF's)
- A.Chen89
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Re: My grounding kit
You can introduce problems if the install has introduced ground loops.
- tescoking
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Re: My grounding kit
I would say it is a part of engine dressing, not messy, anyway, I will show my machanic friend and see what will he say, thanks guys.
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Re: My grounding kit
messy is in the eyes of the beholder and most people would wonder what all the spaghetti was for.
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Re: My grounding kit
My question is why
"Automotive witchcraft"
"Automotive witchcraft"
- tescoking
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Re: My grounding kit
I believed little bit and little bit gain all add up at the end will become big gain, also, why not add a cheapest insurence into the electrolic parts?
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