Checking Current Draw

Will an amp clamp measure DC current? I think I have a drain on my van battery and want to check if there is a drain with nothing running.
Usually not. DC clamps usually use some type of Hall effect sensing which is not always added to the low and moderate cost meters.
 
My Fluke clamp meter has a DC setting, but most cheaper meters will do DC up to 10 amps when the leads are put in series with the load. If your looking for a parasite draw, that should be sufficient.
 
Got a south wire cheap amp clamp that has both ac and dc.

But even near no wires the dc always reads around 0.40amps
 
Modern vehicles are a pain to trace out current draws, because some loads stay on for quite a while after exiting. My dashcam kills my battery over a weekend if I don’t unplug it.
 
I've traced a draining battery hooking my multi meter up in series with the battery, but like hillbilly says it's an involved process because you have to wait thirty minutes, check the meter, pull a fuse, wait another thirty minutes, pull a fuse......lather, rinse, repeat.
 
I had the battery tested and it showed good. I went ahead and had them install a new battery because mine is 4 years old. I want to start testing with a good battery.
I don't think my van has much drawing current at rest. I think the clock and probably the computer. It's a 2007 F100 with nothing extra like power windows.
I plan to put my meter in series with the battery via the negative post to the negative cable to test.
 
I had the battery tested and it showed good. I went ahead and had them install a new battery because mine is 4 years old. I want to start testing with a good battery.
I don't think my van has much drawing current at rest. I think the clock and probably the computer. It's a 2007 F100 with nothing extra like power windows.
I plan to put my meter in series with the battery via the negative post to the negative cable to test.
Good chance that won't end well. Big inrush on many vehicles. Need current protection in series. ECMs go through several stages of power down. If you get down to about 20mA or less, that's usually as good as you can do.
 
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