big_boy wrote:id be supprised if any car draws over 150A witch is a breaker readley advable
You'll find a new motor which is quite tight, or something else slowing the starter motor down will cause the current to increase. The slower a starter is turning then the more current it will draw basically (for a given voltage). The most current drawn by a starter will be when its not turning, which you'll probably notice as a spike in the current reading when you start cranking.
Pretty much what Crampy said anyway
Ah the CANZE days, so so many questions asked then on fusing at the battery.
And yes fuses can pass double their rated current, try doing it for long periods of time however. Part of the reason some people use circuit breakers also. And the fuse/breaker is there to protect the wire anyway, if you get a short to earth and you have the power/starter wire fused at 100A then you're going to get considerably more than 100A draw quite quickly and the fuse/breaker will trip anyway