About ten posts back I said to you don't worry about the way the engine is running until you sort the neutral switch wiring out, very simple, in neutral zero volts, in gear five volts, cranking, battery voltage on pin D11, if you had no ground and the meter was supplying it, the voltage would have showed on the screen when cranking. I explained to you how the system worked, the colour of the wires, the pins to check.
You spend all this time trying to work out why the engine will only run on one cyl, and when you ground the injector is stops. I explained what you were doing and why, if you had no ground on any of the injector grounds you tested, the engine is running because one injector is leaking and is running on the fuel escaping from the pintle under pressure.
What briscoe is saying that when a circuit has lost its ground, the meter is supplying the ground when connected and will show the reading. If that was the case in your problem you would of seen the voltages being tested, but you have not,
The last place I told you to connect was sensor ground, D1 connect your high wattage test light to battery pos and probe the terminal the light should light, or connect your meter on mv and connect the black to a good ground and the red to the pin turn key on and crank should not have more than 20mv. The only thing that is a bit concerning as far as lost ground is you had good voltages on the temp sensor and exhaust temp, you had nothing on iat and they all use that ground so that could have been a place where the meter could have had a false reading from a lost ground, but I think if you lost sensor ground there would be multiple failures in the system and a check engine light.
You spend all this time trying to work out why the engine will only run on one cyl, and when you ground the injector is stops. I explained what you were doing and why, if you had no ground on any of the injector grounds you tested, the engine is running because one injector is leaking and is running on the fuel escaping from the pintle under pressure.
What briscoe is saying that when a circuit has lost its ground, the meter is supplying the ground when connected and will show the reading. If that was the case in your problem you would of seen the voltages being tested, but you have not,
The last place I told you to connect was sensor ground, D1 connect your high wattage test light to battery pos and probe the terminal the light should light, or connect your meter on mv and connect the black to a good ground and the red to the pin turn key on and crank should not have more than 20mv. The only thing that is a bit concerning as far as lost ground is you had good voltages on the temp sensor and exhaust temp, you had nothing on iat and they all use that ground so that could have been a place where the meter could have had a false reading from a lost ground, but I think if you lost sensor ground there would be multiple failures in the system and a check engine light.
Comment