08-05-2009, 09:31 AM | #4 (permalink) |
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I have one on my 370. Considering it's dirt cheap and takes like 10 minutes to install, I felt it was worth the electrical insurance so to speak. I haven't really noticed any big difference that couldn't be attributed to wishful thinking. But especially w/ the Stillen headers (removes a stock engine ground wire) and relocated battery, I figured the extra grounding can't hurt.
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08-05-2009, 09:34 AM | #5 (permalink) |
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makes a difference as in behind the scenes type thing.
you may not notice it but the electronic system will thank you for it. maybe this weekend i'll measure the wire lengths for the G's and Z's and just make them...lol...finally.. |
08-05-2009, 09:35 AM | #6 (permalink) |
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Modern cars are pretty complex electrically...There are lots of opinions both for and against. My opinion is it certainly cannot hurt. I did a custom set-up on my last Audi which was particularly challenged electrically,and it seemed to improve smoothness, light intensity etc. but only minimally..
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08-05-2009, 09:41 AM | #7 (permalink) |
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only older cars greatly benefit from a grounding kit because the ground wire are super tiny and thin. it gets a bad connection after a while. so a new wire makes a noticeable difference.
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08-05-2009, 07:52 PM | #11 (permalink) |
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I have enough electrical/electronics knowledge to know that they don't make a bit of difference (save for $placebo$ effect) until you're talking about huge levels of current (or wire that has mostly failed due to corrosion)...which except for the starter (when in use), you won't ever hit that high of a level of current.
A set of huge filter caps between your alternator and your cars electronics would do more for making your electronics happy....and even those are designed to operate well within the levels of output your alternator can produce... |
08-05-2009, 09:57 PM | #12 (permalink) | |
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Quote:
However, take a look at the stock wiring Nissan puts in the car. There's basically already a "grounding-kit"-like layout going on, with extra grounding bus wires attaching at multiple points around the block and the body of the engine bay. They're doing that for a reason, and my suspicion (not being a car electronics genius or anything) is that they are trying to ensure that all ground references are equal to a certain precision. Think back to basic ohm's law. Any time you have resistance between two points, you have a voltage difference for current flowing between those two points. Since the body and the engine block are not superconducters, they do have resistances which are non-trivial, and probably not nearly as low as a length of fat copper wire running the same distance. Without the extra grounding, therefore, if you had a pair of sensors, one on each side of the engine, which are grounded to the block and receive battery voltage over copper, one might be receiving +14.5V and the other +14.4V, because the grounding points they're using on the block are different (there's resistance in the block between them), and one of them is grounded "closer" to the battery resistance-wise. The more low-resistance ground paths you can add in close proximity to the grounding points of various sensors at the body/block in the engine bay, the more you can reduce this source of ground reference error. That would be a good reason for Nissan to add all the extra wrap-around grounding-wire paths they do at the factory, and more of the same certainly can't hurt. Last edited by wstar; 08-05-2009 at 09:59 PM. |
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08-05-2009, 10:26 PM | #13 (permalink) | |
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The main reason I can think of that there would be multiple grounding points on the engine would be in the case of the components being seperated, or the materials being grounded have enough resistance in them to cause a voltage drop. That said, I imagine that Nissan would have electrical engineers smart enough and thorough enough to recognize this issue and ground things appropriately. My main point was from the angle that installing one won't give you any performance increase, or even a reliability increase. |
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08-06-2009, 01:34 AM | #14 (permalink) | |||
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Like I said though, personally I haven't seen any hard results from mine. If there's any effect, it's too small to really verify afaics. Then again, the cost and installation difficulty is really small too, so it still seems like a decent deal to me. |
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08-06-2009, 01:58 AM | #15 (permalink) |
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.... as an Electronics Engineer let me say that wstar is definately on the right path. We aren't talking about carrying tons of current we are worried about milivolts accuracy for the vast array of sensors on the car. Sure it will work just fine with the stock system and as you will note they have done a very good job with their mesh network.
It comes down to this - do 10ths of a second make a difference driving home? Nope. Does it make a difference on a race track - definately. Do milivolts of accuracy with your sensor make a difference driving home?.......
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