Check to see if the floor board in the car is wet. If so the heater core is leaking. Also check to see if the oil leavel is correct. If the oil is high the head or gasket is bad. If you can smell a "SWEET" odor out side the car after it has been running for a while it may have a slow leak that is burning the fuild before it has a chance to pool under the car.
A ground leakage can damage electrical appliances. When there is a current leakage, it causes the appliance to draw more current through thecircuit, hence produces excess heat. This can damage the appliances.
Yes. It is measuring leakage current to ground.
A leakage current to ground indicates that the ground is not truly an earth ground. A Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter (GFCI) is designed to detect such leakage current and cut off the device from its supply voltage.
As i know,neutral is the return path of current & ground is for any leakage current
The best way to stop earth leakage is to make sure that the are no active circuits going to ground. This will help keep the circuit running right.
You may have blown a head gasket, check you oil to see if the antifreeze is leaking into there.
The hot water (which expands, by the way) has no place to go, so either the cap will blow possibly causing steam burns, or it will drain out onto the ground creating a biohazard.
YOU DONT! THe stuff that goes in pools is not automotive antifreeze. Its usually pink and only a few bucks a bottle.
A small radiator leak can cause antifreeze to leak on your 1998 Chevy Lumina when there are not any spots on the ground. A pinhole in a hose can also cause this.
Where the ground water leakage direction meet into the surface water is called Base flow.
look on the ground and follow it straight up to the engine
You will have antifreeze leaking out and dripping on the ground.