Great question! The negative channel on DYVO tells you how good of a connection you have to ground. Simply connect it to any circuit you want to test to see if there's ground on that circuit. A green LED and low value on DYVO indicates a good connection to ground. This is what you want to see if you're testing a ground circuit. If you're testing a circuit that isn't supposed to have ground, this would indicate a short to ground. Check out our recent Instagram Post that shows testing for a short to ground with DYVO. If you have a fuse that keeps blowing from a short to ground, remove the fuse and connect the negative channel on DYVO in place of the fuse. This allows you to test and find the short without continuously replacing fuses.
Great comment! Our approach to diagnosing is to simplify the problem by breaking it into 3 categories: the component, the positive side, and the ground side. Yes, you're correct, there could also be a problem with the connector. There could also be a problem with fuses, relays, switches, modules, and much more. A problem with any of these, including the connector, are still categorized as being a part of the positive or negative side of the circuit. The terminals inside the connector carry positive and ground to the component. So if there is a problem with the terminals in the connector, you will have a problem on the positive or ground side of the circuit.
How do you find a short to ground with dyvo
Great question! The negative channel on DYVO tells you how good of a connection you have to ground. Simply connect it to any circuit you want to test to see if there's ground on that circuit. A green LED and low value on DYVO indicates a good connection to ground. This is what you want to see if you're testing a ground circuit. If you're testing a circuit that isn't supposed to have ground, this would indicate a short to ground.
Check out our recent Instagram Post that shows testing for a short to ground with DYVO.
If you have a fuse that keeps blowing from a short to ground, remove the fuse and connect the negative channel on DYVO in place of the fuse. This allows you to test and find the short without continuously replacing fuses.
Post the stuff you post on instagram here. I don’t use the instagram
I need to know how to know how to do a f 101 and 174 for a Ford f150 5.4 triton
Do you mean P0101 and P0174 DTC's? Or are you referring to circuit f101 and f174?
@@smackdrachen994 yes I do
@@smackdrachen994 yes I did
@@alexgonzales4575 We're sorry but we don't understand your question.
@@smackdrachen994 yes this is the video I want to watch
3:08 4 things...the connector.
Great comment! Our approach to diagnosing is to simplify the problem by breaking it into 3 categories: the component, the positive side, and the ground side. Yes, you're correct, there could also be a problem with the connector. There could also be a problem with fuses, relays, switches, modules, and much more. A problem with any of these, including the connector, are still categorized as being a part of the positive or negative side of the circuit. The terminals inside the connector carry positive and ground to the component. So if there is a problem with the terminals in the connector, you will have a problem on the positive or ground side of the circuit.
Price please
Please visit our website for prices on all DYVO Kits. www.dyvo.us