Am I'm trying to tell you that after sitting for a week, or even 4 days, the battery is not going to be fully charged. And driving the car for 30 minutes after it's been sitting for a week IS NOT going to recharge it.
These cars go into a low battery condition VERY easily. I drive mine to work...
Got it. So you don't know how to use a voltmeter and check a battery. But won't admit it and would rather argue. 👍🏻
Ive defended you in the past, but im really losing my bandwidth for the constang back and forth you do here. This thread is a mile off topic already. Have fun 👋🏻
Or you can stop making assumptions and just do a voltage test on the battery which takes 30 seconds with a vottmeter. If you haven't done that, then you can not conclude the batteries state of charge is not causing the issue.
As I said above, These batteries are cycled and read by the computer...
How are you verifying your battery is charged when it does this?
The battery needs to cycle and reset itself after sitting or charging. This can take several hours. It's not an instantaneous reset after each start. So in the situation you described above, the battery cannot be eliminated as a...
It's a weird scenario though. He remote started his car (which locks the doors), then opened his trunk and put his key in without opening the doors and pressing start first.
I could see me doing that after work actually. 🤣 Good to know.
I'm not sure what's so difficult here.
All I said is that when the heartbeat (or Galloping sound) is replaced by a chime, it means there is a low battery condition.
If your gallop is disappearing and reappearing randomly, with no chime, and you have verified the battery is fully charged, then...