I noticed that these fuses can only be tested with the key on. Noticed that the power loss on the fuse input went down a volt when i took the fuse out, I'll be getting a new one to see if theres a
You can only measure a voltage drop when the circuit is LOADED and current is flowing.
(That is the problem with using an ohm meter to find poor connections in a circuit. The ohm meter loads the circuit with milliamperes of current. Any old lousy connection can pass milliamperes of current just fine. But load the circuit with live current and those coils may draw 5 amps of current. Poor connections and switch contacts can’t pass that mush current and they begin to generate heat, which adds more resistance. It’s voltage drops that generate the heat.)
You can measure the voltage drop across that ground that grcamma2 has identified. Just load up the circuit that uses that ground and measure the drop from the ground wire eyelet and the negative battery post. That will tell you how much voltage is being dropped through that particular ground path.
Just remember a circuit will drop ALL the voltage available. In your coil circuit, the more voltage that is dropped on the coil’s power circuit, and the more voltage that is dropped on the coil’s ground circuit, the less voltage the coil has to play with.



