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Car 12v plug voltage during engine ignition

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Cihan:
Did anyone measure 12v plug voltage during engine ignition? I wonder if there's dangerously high voltage fluctuation in voltage since I don't unplug phone from charger during engine start. Unfortunately I don't own an oscilloscope.

John B:
I've measured using a 100kHz bandwidth multimeter, so it may not catch high frequency spikes. Depending on the battery health it can easily drop down to 6V

tom66:
On my old car, it actually dropped to zero, because the BCM isolated all non-critical loads during engine start (possibly to improve start performance at low temperatures).  On my vehicle (small European city car) the crank voltage dropped to about 7V at the battery as the starter solenoid engaged, then hovered around 11V while the engine was started.  I didn't see any high spikes, I suspect those are more likely the closer to the battery or alternator you go, or only occur under certain circumstances like high engine revs when load is removed (so-called "load dump").

Circlotron:
I expect the most likely time for a spike to occur is when the starter solenoid releases and several hundred amps is interrupted. The 1 metre or so of cable from the battery to the starter solenoid would have a certain amount of inductance and I’ve seen situations where a feed connection to the rest of the vehicle is made from the solenoid terminal. There couldn’t be a worse place, I’m sure. Similar in principle to the busy end of a boost converter inductor, but with no diode feeding the following capacitor!

jwet:
Starting is really not a very tough action for loads.  As others have said, either actuating the starter turns off the lighter socket or you get get the cold cranking droop which can go pretty low on a very cold morning- 6V isn't unusual.

The tougher actions are what are called "load dumps" where a large load is turned off and the alternator is cranking out a bunch of current, this is where you can the big spikes.  The bad loads are the AC compressor magnetic clutch, power windows and seats or a loose connection to something like headlights or a loose connection in the charging system.  Each connect and disconnect causes a good spike with a lot of energy.  Since about 2015, a lot of the better cars have a central suppression system, a monster tranzorb like device that is up stream of everything usually in the charging system or before the main fuse block.

My best advice is to use good  quality accessory adapters.  Don't use the ones from the dollar store or a gas station.  The good one's have some decent surge protection.  Don't ruin your $1000 phone trying to save $20 on an adapter.

If you're curious, there is an ISO spec numbered ISO7637 that lays out all the horrors of vehicle power distribution.  The real spec costs money but there is a pretty good wiki and some other resources on line.  ISO 7637 is the parent spec of some other specs that it references for charging system and trucks.  Trucks are really bad.

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