Not sure what you mean by 'amps per week'. Amps is usually a term for measuring the instantaneous flow of current. If you are saying to have a continuous 3 amp draw at rest, that's a lot.
If you mean 3 amp/hours over the course of a week, that only about 0.018 amps continuous, which is acceptable for a modern vehicle.
Yes, Amp-Hours. But what I was really attempting to drive at is how sensitive the KL is to even slight battery degradation.
I'm sure he meant 3AH (not an electrics guy, but shouldn't such a draw be shown in W.hr instead ? Oh well don't mind me...). Anyway yeah 18 milliamps is nothing to worry about. Plenty more juice from a fully charged 80AH battery.
We had a member here (a former Mod) who did a fancy draw test on his 2015 KL :
Wh is an easy conversion from Ah, but the problem with Wh (volts x amps) is as the voltage drops over time as the battery discharges, the watts also drop assuming that the Ah draw is relatively constant. It is entirely possible that the Ah draw increases as the battery discharges (constant watts) which actually accelerates the rate of degradation of the battery.
If Rojhan's calculations are correct, that's 0.035Ah x 24 hours = 0.84Ah/day x 7 days = 5.88Ah per week (assuming constant Ah draw). That means my 3Ah estimate is way low for my 2019. Probably is.
My calculations? Disclaimer: nowhere near "accurate". I estimated my loss based on the highly inaccurate but widely published voltage drop approximation of an AGM SoC. I.e. 12.8vdc 100% SoC, 12.6vdc 75% Soc, 12.4vdc 50% SoC, 12.0vdc 25% SoC, and 11.8vdc effectively discharged. My battery reads 12.8vdc when fully charged so I'm good there. It read 12.7vdc after 3 weeks when I had trouble. Since the vdc drop and SoC is linear to around 50% SoC, I figured it was about 1/2 way between 75% and 100%, or somewhere in the neighborhood of 85% SoC. I believe the OEM battery had a 75Ah reserve capacity, so 85% * 75Ah = 10.875Ah lost over three weeks. 10.875Ah / 3 weeks = 3.626Ah, so being conservative "about 3Ah".
1) Vdc vs SoC loss is a generalized approximation. 2) 12.7vdc was "about" 12.7vdc - maybe 12.74, maybe 12.65. Don't actually remember. 3) 3 weeks was "about" 21 days. Could have been 18. Maybe it was 24.
Dubious starting information + highly precise calculations + rounding down to be conservative = junk data. Again, the point is not so much the exact parasitic draw, it's how sensitive the KL is to even slight battery degradation. I mean, really? 12.7+/-0.05vdc is enough to cause flakey stuff to start happening? At least it was in mine.
BTW - I would never attempt to put any meter rated at 10A +/- 2% that didn't have a current shunt when an accidental surge ("I didn't mean to start it!") would in all probability pretty much vaporize the multimeter! ...not to mention the resulting fire.