AZ_Ryan
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #16
Just because the charge isn't up to 100% doesn't mean you need to put a battery tender on your car every day to daily drive it. If that tech was right then everyone would have a dead battey after a few months. I've been daily driving mustangs for 10 years in the Arizona and never had an issue like that.Told ya….
yup!
No…it’s not.
An alternator never brings your battery up to 100%. It’s not good enough on these new cars. My wife’s new Lincoln went into battery Protection Mode one day. We called Lincoln concierge, and within an hour a tech shows up. Turns out it was a friend of mine I know for over 20 years. He works for the tow company that has a contract with Ford. He said his entire day is spent jump starting batteries that go dead or dormant on new cars. he bought a new Nissan Kicks and said his battery drains all the time too. All he had to do was put the jump pack on for a minute to wake the battery up. I since have bought that same jump pack.
I once had an alternator fry on my 72 Camaro at work. Drove it home 45 minute ride no problem. Had an alternator go bad on my 91 Z28, didn’t make it around the corner.
Nowadays….if you don’t put your car on a battery tender, expect low voltage issues at some point.
When I put either of our NEW cars on the Battery Tender, it will have the full charge red light on for sometimes a full day before going into flashing green trickle.
Whether you like it or not, Modern car manufacturers do not supply a battery and recharging system that is equal to the drain modern electronics put on them. This was told to me by the tech who has to drive all over town jumping new cars.
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