'02 Tahoe that I have had for several mos. I am on my 2nd battery but it drains overnight. Seems to be charging OK and alternator checked out OK. I have a 2+ amp draw w/ nothing on that drops to .5 when I pull the 15A fuse under the hood for the radio, climate control, instrument panel. It drops to .02 when I pull the 25A radio amp fuse. Is there a separate power amp that could be staying on? I have the standard ST audio system. Is there some place I can start unplugging components one at a time? Seems like there are 4 or 5 fuses that involve the radio.
Are you doing that with the driver's door open? Open doors keep certain modules "awake" and draw current until the doors have been closed long enough and then they power down. Follow the procedure below (after 30 minutes with the door open you will be fine)
1. Select the highest amp scale on an ammeter and disconnect the battery negative cable.
2. Install the ammeter between the battery and the battery cable. A jumper wire needs to be connected in parallel to the ammeter to reconnect the battery at the same time the meter remains installed. Both the ammeter and a jumper wire are connecting the battery cable to the battery at this time. This allows the vehicle to power down (go to sleep).
3. Wait 30 minutes. Turn the ammeter on. Remove the jumper wire, being sure that the ammeter does not come disconnected. This is now the actual vehicle's battery drain.
4. If the draw is more than 50 mA (.050 Amps), remove the fuses one at a time to locate the source of the drain. Leave the fuses out until draw is isolated, as reinstalling may reset timers and give a false draw.
5. Consult a wire diagram to disconnect each component that is fed by the fuse causing the draw. If it is a computer causing the draw, check for signals into the computer that may be waking it up (handle switches, etc.).
NOTE: MAKE SURE ALL VISOR MIRRORS ARE SHUT AND ALL DOME LIGHTS, GLOVE BOX, ETC ARE SWITCHED OFF FIRST AS TO NOT WASTE YOUR TIME!