H2OnSnow
Junior Member
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2026
- Posts
- 8
- Reaction score
- 7
- Location
- New Hampshire and Colorado
- First Name
- Rich
- Truck Year
- 82
- Truck Model
- Blazer
- Engine Size
- 6.2
Just replacing a braided ground strap with a large gauge cable may or may not give you a "better" ground. The braided strap from the frame to body, engine to firewall, etc. is a braided strap for a reason. It is VERY flexible to withstand all of the flexing due to rubber mounted engine and body; and it has many very small strands, which for many purposes is better than fewer large strands. If you buy very "over priced" small strand cable, then your argument is valid; if you buy the Amazon priced cable that is 1/20th the price of the good stuff, then you probably have an inferior ground system. The 2ga cables that support the starter are the only ones that can properly be the few large strand cables, as they are for running the starter and little else.While this is largely true, most people don't have the abilty nor desire to put the time into calculating all the various loads to determine the perfectly sized wire gauge for the shared ground path. The oem can do that. They are incentivised to do so for weight and cost savings. But for all us schmucks it's way easier to just buy a 6 gauge starter cable for $10 and slap it in for the ground cable. You can't over ground your electrical system, so doing this hurts nothing and ensures you don't accidentally undersize your ground path. Plus now you have flexibility if down the road you decide to add to your electrical load via new lights or new stereo.
The metaphor for different sized arms doesn't really work. It's more of a different diameter hose situation. You're limited by the smallest hose diameter in a chain of hoses. Which is still a flawed metaphor, but it's closer to reality than the arm comparison.