<VV> Was Still having electrical problems/ now Importance of good grounds

HallGrenn at aol.com HallGrenn at aol.com
Sun Feb 26 10:38:28 EST 2012


Amen,
 
Anyone who has had a sixties era European car know this first hand as  
well.  On my Greenbrier just detaching, cleaning up and reattaching ground  
wires at the taillights, headlights and parking lights made a tremendous  
difference in lighting brightness.
 
Bob
 
 
In a message dated 2/26/2012 10:30:39 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
jvhroberts at aol.com writes:


Without a doubt, good grounds are a MUST! These grounding  straps are for 
RFI issues, but are stout enough (if they're all there) to  improve the 
electrical ground to the engine. Of course, the main reason the  negative battery 
cable goes to the engine is for this reason as well.  

One of the things modern cars do a LOT better is grounding. They  
invariably have a grounding wire from whatever electrical/electronic device to  a 
good, solid ground. No metal clips, no grounding through the screws into the  
body/frame, etc., an actual, honest to God ground wire! A pretty good example 
 to follow, actually, whenever you work on some part, like taillight 
sockets,  etc., would be to add a grounding pigtail, and not rely on the socket 
clips to  the housing to do the job. 



John  Roberts




-----Original Message-----
From: LonzoVair  <LonzoVair at aol.com>
To: cooperj123 <cooperj123 at msn.com>;  virtualvairs 
<virtualvairs at corvair.org>
Sent: Sun, Feb 26, 2012 10:17  am
Subject: Re: <VV> Still having electrical  problems





In a message dated 2/25/2012 8:28:25 P.M.  Eastern Standard Time,  
cooperj123 at msn.com writes:


Hello  All,  My '65 Monza sedan is still having an electrical  issue and I  
am checking to see if anyone else has experienced a similar  problem.  
First- 
thanks for the advice so far!  <snip> 3- The  copper  ground straps from 
engine to body were in very poor shape-  have been replaced  and ground is 
now 
ok. <snip>

Jim  (and everyone else),
The three or four little copper straps that ground the  engine shroud to  
the body are for radio noise suppression only. If  you got your car or FC  
without a radio, it didn't come with the  straps... also, if you DID get a  
radio, you also got a capacitor  (a.k.a. condenser) installed on the 
voltage  
regulator and the coil  (or if an EM, on the generator and the coil)... to  
the 
best of my  knowledge, all other grounding was done through the factory  
wiring  harness or at the negative battery cable where it attached to the 
frame   
(on EMs) or the small pigtail on the LM ground cable. 

Someone more  knowledgeable than me needs to correct me if I'm wrong...  
Ned? You  did some schematics... what say   you?

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