I can tell you EXACTLY what problem that is. It's like running a dribble of water through a schedule 40 sewer pipe. The size of the whole car cuts the current way down, similar to running too BIG a cable. I don't think it's that he doesn't trust the car to conduct, I think it's that he KNOWS the car is to BIG a conductor. The current needs to be held in the confines of the proper size cable in order for all of it to reach it's destination. I hope that made sense.
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Please Rusty PLEAUAUZZZZZZZ
This is NOT how current through a conductor works.
RESISTANCE of a conductor depends on
material the conductor is made of, IE copper, aluminum, is better than steel for the same size. Some materials like copper have less R, some like steel have more R
whether it's solid or stranded, IE (with DC, not AC) the total cross sectional area) The larger the area, the lower the R
and the length of the conductor. The shorter the conductor, the lower the R
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical_resistance_and_conductance
"An object of uniform cross section has a resistance proportional to its resistivity and length and inversely proportional to its cross-sectional area"
The important part of that statement is "cross sectional area." and "inversely proportional"
What this simply means, SIMPLY is that the larger a cable is, the lower it's resistance. There is no such thing as "too large" a cable, or current somehow getting lost or drying up because it's too big.
The floor of a unibody is not QUITE that simple, because of the way the cable must connect, and it certainly is not exactly "uniform."