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Finding The Source Of Electrical Shorts In Your Car

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Uploaded by on Jan 19, 2012

Scotty Kilmer, mechanic for the last 44 years, shows how you can find where shorts exist in your car. Using a simple broadcasting tool, you can trace down shorts in just minutes.

Category:

Autos & Vehicles

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License:

Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 11 dislikes

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Uploader Comments (scottykilmer)

  • Hi Scotty, can you give me the link where you bought it? I love it and you're right.. it makes life easier :)

  • @axenz1 it's sold by power probe, just google that.

  • Hey Scotty i Was Wondering Why Would My Car Jerk On The Highway When Going About 55mph Or More

  • @GreenFish325 tons of things can do that, change the fuel filter and try my video "how to clean fuel injectors on your car"

  • How much does one of those recievers cost?

  • @eltheii64 119 at amazon.com

Top Comments

  • @TheRicoMalibu pain in the ass, they cost a ton , burn out fast, and blind me at night when yuppies drive by with them.

  • @gabyisbeast get out your wallet, you need tons. I would start with stuff like the power probe III and a good socket and ratchet set.

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All Comments (170)

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  • thanks scotty you the man!!!!

  • @Fayte34 well, have the test in this video done to find the short. that's what it's for, but it's not easy, since the wiring goes into the fuel pump inside the gas tank. That's chryslers for you, couldn't give me one. From my experience, I would say fuel pump though

  • Hey scotty, i have a 2002 Chrysler sebring convertible thats plowing the 20 amp start/fuel fuse. i put 3-4 new fuses in it, as soon as i try to turn the engine over you can watch the new fuse blow, the shop i took it to said it could be the wiring or the fuel pump. do you have any suggestions on which way i should lean towards instead of taking a chance on one. Either way both problems could be exspensive. i would love to go the cheap route. please help :(

  • i love your D.I.Y video. Thank for the tutorial.

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