Gaming3 mins ago
Flat Battery
My car battery keeps going flat over a couple of days. It starts straight away when I jump start tho. Does the battery recharge better at tick over or do the revs need to be high ??
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by rob1295. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You will get a bit of charge at tickover (modern alternators are pretty good), but a decent run (an hour or more) with the revs at a higher level is probably needed if your battery is actually too flat to start the car.
If it then goes flat over a couple of days then either there is something left on which is draining the battery (internal light, boot light, radio?) or the battery is knacked and you are probably going to need a new battery.
If it then goes flat over a couple of days then either there is something left on which is draining the battery (internal light, boot light, radio?) or the battery is knacked and you are probably going to need a new battery.
batterys dont always charge straight away from start up, some vehicles have to hit certain revs before the battery actually starts charging, so short low speed jouneys can and do drain the battery.
Also the red light on the dash isnt like the old days it isnt a charging light its an ignition light so even if the red light is out it doesnt mean the battery is being charged.
Also the red light on the dash isnt like the old days it isnt a charging light its an ignition light so even if the red light is out it doesnt mean the battery is being charged.
I had this with the MILs car, and narrowed it down to one faulty circuit.
I didn't have a meter, so just put a bulb between the battery and the connecting lead. The light stayed on, showing there was a continual flow of leccy.
I pulled each fuse in turn until the light went out, so I knew which one was doing it.
I didn't have a meter, so just put a bulb between the battery and the connecting lead. The light stayed on, showing there was a continual flow of leccy.
I pulled each fuse in turn until the light went out, so I knew which one was doing it.
-- answer removed --