^ thought so, I don't see my self spending 150 bucks for 50 bucks worth of cables ha.
I am interested into what " isolated DC system" means and how it deals with being grounded. There are Factory ground points. So what people are saying is that they are not enough.
Sorry I thought you were talking about those metal connectors that drag on the road. Those are to connect the vehicle to earth ground which is to prevent static discharges. Tankers carrying gasoline have those for safety reasons. A car would have absolutely no use for one of those.
Apparently a "grounding kit" is to replace the stock thick-as-my-arm copper cable that ties the negative terminal to the frame of the car, correct? Yeah there's no reason to replace that unless you're running a one ton truck that needs a thousands amps running from the battery, and even then the lack of current available would be caused by corrosion on the terminals rather than the actual size or quality of the wire. If your car's electrical system is acting sketchy, it's extremely unlikely that the wire itself or car frame is damaged since there's really nothing that touches those wires. Just take the ground cable off, clean it with a wire brush and maybe some CLR or some kind of solvent designed to remove grime. The wire is good; the grime forming around the terminals is the problem. Using special 1337 pwnz0rz cables wouldn't help this because the awesome expensive cables will still have dirt and grime on the connection points and will still need to be cleaned if the grime becomes a problem.
So what is DC isolation, you asked. While your car is not tied to earth ground, the frame of the car still acts like a DC ground. That's nice because it means the system requires fewer wires to work and using the giant thousand pound frame as a current carrying conductor means it keeps the impedance low. What I should have said in my last post is that your car COMPUTER is isolated. Sensitive electronics are always isolated because the frame of your car is bound to pick up random electrical noise from the air, from radio towers, or even induced voltages by driving around power lines or train tracks. Isolation means the computer's power runs through a DC-DC converter to clean it up and remove all the noise. While things like your starter motor are powered by the frame of the car and 1 wire, the electronics are isolated and required 2 wires. There's no common point for the computer system to use; it needs its own dedicated wires. The computer's circuit is "isolated" from the rest of the car's electrical system.
If your car had bad grounding, it simply wouldn't work. My friend's Monte Carlo was having grounding problem and the car would mysteriously die for what seems like no reason. It had some grime on the battery terminals but it worked like new when we cleaned them with a wire brush.
It is possible for electronic noise to enter the computer circuitry from bad grounding techniques, but if it was bad enough to cause a problem your whole ECU would not work.
This! Bad grounding = car will not turn on!