swhite wrote:
Sorry dtp, read that fast today and missed it was you. Thanks again, I appreciate the help.
It's all good man. I help to be helpful, not for the glory.
Yeah I agree with Mitch... sounds like a grounding issue. Post the readings you are getting here in a format similar to what's in the table in your manual. It could help us narrow the search for the issue you are having.
Interpreting meter readings isn't always an exact science. Often it just lets us know something is wonky and we need to look in that general area for the problem.
Does your meter have a continuity test setting? It gives an audible sound when there is a clear path (good continuity) and no sound if there isn't. If it does, set it to that and for any component that connects directly to ground, test from the lead of that component (the side that goes to ground) to the chassis. Sound means good connection, no sound means there is a break in the circuit (bad ground) and it will be between that component and ground. Possibly a bad solder joint or even a forgotten one (lol I've done it) or it's going to the wrong spot altogether.