Stratman397
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #1
Now, I know a lot of people on here have been having problems with their battery’s dying.
So I was reading up on some of the Mustangs still coming into the dealers around here, and saw that they have battery with run down protection.
So I was reading up on that, and with me being a woman and not knowing a whole lot about cars, other than how to drive them pretty much, I didn’t really know what all this means. Can someone explain this to me? I would ask my husband, but he’s in bed.
A system responsive to the voltage of a motor vehicle battery when the vehicle engine is not running operates to disconnect the battery from the vehicle electrical loads prior to the point at which the battery becomes too discharged to restart the vehicle engine. The apparatus which operates to disconnect the battery from the loads is inhibited if an abrupt battery voltage drop indicative of vehicle entry is sensed, and the inhibit is maintained for a timed period sufficiently long in duration to allow entry of the vehicle and starting of the engine.
TIA
So I was reading up on some of the Mustangs still coming into the dealers around here, and saw that they have battery with run down protection.
So I was reading up on that, and with me being a woman and not knowing a whole lot about cars, other than how to drive them pretty much, I didn’t really know what all this means. Can someone explain this to me? I would ask my husband, but he’s in bed.
A system responsive to the voltage of a motor vehicle battery when the vehicle engine is not running operates to disconnect the battery from the vehicle electrical loads prior to the point at which the battery becomes too discharged to restart the vehicle engine. The apparatus which operates to disconnect the battery from the loads is inhibited if an abrupt battery voltage drop indicative of vehicle entry is sensed, and the inhibit is maintained for a timed period sufficiently long in duration to allow entry of the vehicle and starting of the engine.
TIA
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