gpking
Member
Pretty similar to what I did. I couldn't find a wire brush though, so I got into all of the nooks and crannies with a handheld drill and mini-grinding wheel attachment.kickass audio said:wow, thats an insane amount of resistance in that seat bolt. See why you never use one now? Getting it to 5 ohms is still way too much resistance, its 0 ohms or GTFO with wires like this. I just took one of my cargo bolts to a bench grinder with a wire wheel on one side and put it on the wire wheel for awhile. Then when it was nice and cleaned up I took my metric tap and die kit and tapped the bolt that is riveted to the body or it may be welded idk for sure but I tapped the hole just to grind out the rust in the gaps. I also ground down the paint a little on the top part of the cargo hold down where the little hook flips up or down so that was nice and clean.
My bolt is almost completely shiny now.

I tried your method with my cleaned cargo bolt and it worked, overload and beep.kickass audio said:What other location are you putting your meter to when you test for resistance? And are you holding it on there firmly? If you slide the tip around a little when testing resistance your reading will vary a lot. I say get an alligator clip or something and clip it around the hook that is in your door jamb that the doors grab to hold the doors closed. It's the only truly bare metal part that exists and looks like clean chrome. Touch your probes together too and see what that resistance reads. Usually its only a few milliohms but still check what that is.
To test resistance of my wiring combined with the ground I took my positive amp power cable, connected it to the negative terminal of the battery and used that as my "door jamb".
I connected my ground wire to the cargo bolt and screwed it in snug. I tested the resistance from the power cable (hooked to the negative on the battery) to the ground wire (connected to the cleaned cargo bolt) and got a reading of 0.1ohms.
My DX250.1 came in today and I got it hooked up; so far so good.
The amp doesn't seem to break a sweat rattling the glass, sound quality is great too. I'm surprised how much sound that little 12" can put out.
I had a local shop install it first and they didn't grind off any paint on the ground and they used self tapping screws that were not snug at all. Plus the metal on the floor of the trunk was so thin it would warp easily. I later on plugged that hole and drilled a hole on the a-frame that goes above my strut to support the rear of the car and used a nut and a bolt after I ground off the paint.