LOL... so now you got me going here...
I went to my EVTM and it stated:
Turn on the power to the circuit. Perform a Voltage Check between the suspected inoperative ground and the frame. Any indicated voltage means that there is a bad ground.
I understand that, but not how to test the batery cable if there is no drain.
SO I went out to my car to test.
I went from neg bat terminal to a ground on the fender... no voltage.
I then loosened up my neg bat cable and tested... still no voltage.
(as a side note... with the cable that loose, I really do not believe that enough amperage would get through to crank the engine)
I then disconnected the cable... I got 12 volts.!
Now that didn't make sense to me until I thought...
It seems to me that there is always a slight drain on the system, such as the computer keep alive memory, perhaps a clock, radio station memory, alarm, remote starter controls; stuff like that. All very very low amperage stuff. In my mind... if not for that, then one would not get any voltage even with the test I did by pulling the neg cable. I refer to an old test to see if there is something draining the battery, and that is to pull a battery cable and put a 12 volt light bulb with test leads between the cable and the battery terminal. If it glows, there is a drain. So those very low ameprage connections made the connection for the current to flow from the positive lead of the battery, through my volt meter, to the negative pole of the battery. Thus registering 12 volts.
It also seems that for one to get a drop in voltage, the ground would have to be pretty cruddy, and that one could still have 12 volts, but not allow enough amperage to flow through to be effective.
I think that I understand the confusion, in that a bad ground will not cause a current drain, in fact it will inhibit a drain. However there must be current flow in order for it to register on the voltmeter.
So in thinking this through...
If one has a good connection from the negative battery terminal to the cable and then to the block, when one probes with the voltmeter one should get no voltage at any of those connections. It seems to me that one would not get voltage at the fenders or the voltage regulator either, even if they were disconnected, because the current would flow through the good ground. OR there would be no current flow through the voltmeter.
Conversely if there is a bad ground, one would have to work his way back to the battery to find the closest point that he pulls voltage through the voltmeter. He would have to fix that one and then continue working his way towards any component he is trying to isolate.
I can see how if a component such as the fuel pump has its own power supply and its individual ground, that if there is a poor ground that if one probes it with the voltmeter, one is supplying an additional ground for current to flow through, and thusly it would register on the voltmeter.
I am missing though how this method would locate a poor fender ground.
Sorry Fred, this is an example how I drove my science teachers nuts. :wacko: For the most part your explanation was very good, and understandable. I guess I am just missing something. Thanks for trying

/emoticons/
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joe
EDIT: This may appear to be a little out of time line in that it took me two and a half hours to write this up between thinking, and work, and in the meantime Seabronc made and posted some additional clarifications.