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Car Battery Failure

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polygonum

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Jun 17, 2013, 2:39:39 PM6/17/13
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About two weeks ago car was in a paintshop for a week due to very minor
accident damage. Last Tuesday it was in for MoT. Last Thursday the car
would not start – had been perfectly fine at last use on Wednesday.
Battery appeared to have failed – I got a moment or two of ignition
light, then that would not light up and door locks would not work. Lidl
charger wouldn’t even look at it. Not then, nor several hours later.

Called RAC, man came, jump start, seems OK (i.e. nothing whatsoever
wrong with the car itself). Made some measurements on the battery and
his special meter displayed “REPLACE BATTERY”. But, rather surprisingly,
it was charging and would restart the engine. RAC man made various notes
on his callout form – e.g. meter suggested capacity was down from 510 to
198 cold cranking current, charging was down less than 10 A after ten
minutes, etc.

Called battery supplier (where I bought the current battery) as it has a
lifetime warranty. OK- bring it in they said. So I did. When I got there
they explained that the battery had to be cold. For now, I thought, OK –
I will pay for replacement, go home, swap them over and take old battery
back for refund. Paid, took battery home, bought 3/8” extension bar for
the socket set from Axminster (yes – nothing I had would handle the
precise position of the battery retainer), and swapped over.

Today I take the old battery, nice and cold, to supplier who tests it
with his special meter thingy. “Sorry, it’s fine. Perfectly OK.”
Me, by then wondering what would happen, pointed at RAC man’s details.
Man behind counter read then retried his meter – this time it failed
immediately. “Won’t even load” or something like that. I got full refund
- so am happy. (Old battery was about 3 years, 9 months old. So fairly
pleased at that.)

The battery appears to me to be a perfectly ordinary Yuasa 065.

Any suggestions for what the hell the battery was doing? If it had been
pancaked and then refused to work at all, I would have understood. But
it seemed mostly OK for a few days.

--
Rod

newshound

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Jun 17, 2013, 4:02:09 PM6/17/13
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On 17/06/2013 19:39, polygonum wrote:

>
> Called battery supplier (where I bought the current battery) as it has a
> lifetime warranty.
>
Never heard of a lifetime warrenty on a battery before. Just put a
replacement Yuasa (expensive for the size, but no choice) on an 04 plate
Carry, not sure if it was original.

polygonum

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Jun 17, 2013, 4:23:06 PM6/17/13
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Sheet of paper had "one year/two year/lifetime" strike-through options -
so not that unusual through this supplier. :-)

He did look very surprised to be handling a claim on a Yuasa - and was
suggesting they do usually last forever (or at least until people have
forgotten about the warranty!)

--
Rod

Vir Campestris

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Jun 17, 2013, 4:25:57 PM6/17/13
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On 17/06/2013 21:02, newshound wrote:
Feeling I've seen it before. It's replaced free while you own the car.

Now how often have you owned a car, and replaced the battery twice?

Andy

The Other Mike

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Jun 17, 2013, 5:20:40 PM6/17/13
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On Mon, 17 Jun 2013 21:02:09 +0100, newshound <news...@stevejqr.plus.com>
wrote:

>On 17/06/2013 19:39, polygonum wrote:
>
>>
>> Called battery supplier (where I bought the current battery) as it has a
>> lifetime warranty.
>>
>Never heard of a lifetime warrenty on a battery before.

I can't recall if it was Unipart or Halfords or even both that used to do
lifetime warranties on batteries a couple of decades ago.

Most I've seen at a motor factors is about three years.

--

Bob Eager

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Jun 17, 2013, 5:36:23 PM6/17/13
to
On Mon, 17 Jun 2013 22:20:40 +0100, The Other Mike wrote:

> On Mon, 17 Jun 2013 21:02:09 +0100, newshound
> <news...@stevejqr.plus.com>
> wrote:
>
>>On 17/06/2013 19:39, polygonum wrote:
>>
>>
>>> Called battery supplier (where I bought the current battery) as it has
>>> a lifetime warranty.
>>>
>>Never heard of a lifetime warrenty on a battery before.
>
> I can't recall if it was Unipart or Halfords or even both that used to
> do lifetime warranties on batteries a couple of decades ago.

Pretty sure Esso did.

--
Use the BIG mirror service in the UK: http://www.mirrorservice.org
My posts (including this one) are my copyright and if @diy_forums on
Twitter wish to tweet them they can pay me £30 a post
*lightning surge protection* - a w_tom conductor

Davey

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Jun 17, 2013, 6:53:06 PM6/17/13
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On Mon, 17 Jun 2013 19:39:39 +0100
polygonum <rmoud...@vrod.co.uk> wrote:

> About two weeks ago car was in a paintshop for a week due to very
> minor accident damage. Last Tuesday it was in for MoT. Last Thursday
> the car would not start – had been perfectly fine at last use on
> Wednesday. Battery appeared to have failed – I got a moment or two of
> ignition light, then that would not light up and door locks would not
> work. Lidl charger wouldn’t even look at it. Not then, nor several
> hours later.
>

snip
>
> The battery appears to me to be a perfectly ordinary Yuasa 065.
>
> Any suggestions for what the hell the battery was doing? If it had
> been pancaked and then refused to work at all, I would have
> understood. But it seemed mostly OK for a few days.
>

My thinking is that a car door was left ajar while it was in the
paintshop, which drained the battery down to a very low level; or
maybe the internal light was left on. Once it's been there, it's hard to
predict what the battery is capable of doing.
--
Davey.

Dave Plowman (News)

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Jun 17, 2013, 7:06:57 PM6/17/13
to
In article <b299hd...@mid.individual.net>,
polygonum <rmoud...@vrod.co.uk> wrote:
> He did look very surprised to be handling a claim on a Yuasa - and was
> suggesting they do usually last forever (or at least until people have
> forgotten about the warranty!)

I got 11 years out of the replacement Bosch battery in my BMW. Not many
people keep a car that long. IMHO, no lead acid battery lasts forever.

--
*It's this dirty because I washed it with your wife's knickers*

Dave Plowman da...@davenoise.co.uk London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.

Davey

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Jun 17, 2013, 7:33:01 PM6/17/13
to
On Tue, 18 Jun 2013 00:06:57 +0100
"Dave Plowman (News)" <da...@davenoise.co.uk> wrote:

> In article <b299hd...@mid.individual.net>,
> polygonum <rmoud...@vrod.co.uk> wrote:
> > He did look very surprised to be handling a claim on a Yuasa - and
> > was suggesting they do usually last forever (or at least until
> > people have forgotten about the warranty!)
>
> I got 11 years out of the replacement Bosch battery in my BMW. Not
> many people keep a car that long. IMHO, no lead acid battery lasts
> forever.
>

Nor the battery of a laptop computer.
--
Davey.

Michael Chare

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Jun 18, 2013, 12:04:16 AM6/18/13
to
On 17/06/2013 19:39, polygonum wrote:
> About two weeks ago car was in a paintshop for a week due to very minor
> accident damage. Last Tuesday it was in for MoT. Last Thursday the car
> would not start � had been perfectly fine at last use on Wednesday.
> Battery appeared to have failed � I got a moment or two of ignition
> light, then that would not light up and door locks would not work. Lidl
> charger wouldn�t even look at it. Not then, nor several hours later.
>

My experience of modern cars/batteries is that the batteries tend to die
completely suddenly. - perhaps because (IME) modern cars tend to be very
good at starting, and so will work with batteries that only store a
small charge.


--
Michael Chare

Frank Erskine

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Jun 18, 2013, 3:07:13 AM6/18/13
to
On Mon, 17 Jun 2013 23:53:06 +0100, Davey <da...@example.invalid>
wrote:
Many many years ago I had a Morris Marina (1.8TC Coupe). One one
occasion the battery would flatten after a couple of days (I only used
it occasionally).
I measured the quiescent discharge of the battery at almost exactly
half an amp, which I thought was a bit too much like some real figure.
It turned out to be the 6W hatch-back light. The clip-in Pin switch
had dislocated itself, leaving the lamp glowimg permanently whilst
the hatch was closed.

--
Frank Erskine

Brian Gaff

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Jun 18, 2013, 3:43:14 AM6/18/13
to
Dodgy internal connection, probably starting to corrode on intercell
connections.
Brian

--
From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active
"polygonum" <rmoud...@vrod.co.uk> wrote in message
news:b293fe...@mid.individual.net...

Gary

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Jun 18, 2013, 3:57:10 AM6/18/13
to
On 18/06/2013 08:43, Brian Gaff wrote:
> Dodgy internal connection, probably starting to corrode on intercell
> connections.
> Brian
>
I had a life time guarantee battery for a Nissan, which I got from
Leyland spares and my experiance was simular to yours. It started the
car on a cold spring morning. No problem, so off we went to the local
petrol station 2 mins down road. Filled up for the jurney and went to
start the car and nothing. the radio went off and nothing. Luckily the
standing voltage was enough to run the ignition system so it bumped. We
did a 150 miles and when we got to where we were going, switched off and
on again and nothing at all. We had to get a battery from the local
Leyland parts garage. ( lucky it was open as it was a Easter weekend).

Gary

Jules Richardson

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Jun 18, 2013, 3:05:08 PM6/18/13
to
On Tue, 18 Jun 2013 00:06:57 +0100, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:

> In article <b299hd...@mid.individual.net>,
> polygonum <rmoud...@vrod.co.uk> wrote:
>> He did look very surprised to be handling a claim on a Yuasa - and was
>> suggesting they do usually last forever (or at least until people have
>> forgotten about the warranty!)
>
> I got 11 years out of the replacement Bosch battery in my BMW.

Our ol' Toyota's battery made it to 15 before it finally gave up. Summers
up around 80F here, and winters as cold as -40F, so it's not like it was
a "hot climate" or "cold climate" thing that made it do so well. It was
used just about every day, so never had to sit unused for long periods,
and perhaps that helped - but plenty of other vehicles are used like
that, and their batteries don't last nearly as long.

Battery was an Interstate, rated somewhere around 650 CCA IIRC. Mileage
is up around the 250k mark.

Oh, and now at 16 years, the original exhaust system has just started
blowing - somehow I doubt a replacement will do as well :-(

cheers

Jules

Adrian

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Jun 18, 2013, 3:18:24 PM6/18/13
to
On Tue, 18 Jun 2013 19:05:08 +0000, Jules Richardson wrote:

>> I got 11 years out of the replacement Bosch battery in my BMW.

> Our ol' Toyota's battery made it to 15 before it finally gave up.

The (Citroen branded) battery on 'erselfs 2cv has a sticker on it saying
"IMPORTANT - USE BEFORE MARCH 2002". I know we didn't buy it new, so it
probably got swapped around off another car at some stage. It's sat on
the car, disconnected, but totally unused every winter, and up to 2yrs on
a couple of occasions. A few times, it's been left connected for extended
periods and the radio memory's drained it so flat that the oil pressure
light won't even come on when you turn the key.

I don't know who actually made it, but I'd happily buy their batteries
again...

polygonum

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Jun 18, 2013, 3:21:22 PM6/18/13
to
On 18/06/2013 08:07, Frank Erskine wrote:
> On Mon, 17 Jun 2013 23:53:06 +0100, Davey <da...@example.invalid>
> wrote:
>
>> On Mon, 17 Jun 2013 19:39:39 +0100
>> polygonum <rmoud...@vrod.co.uk> wrote:
>>
>>> About two weeks ago car was in a paintshop for a week due to very
>>> minor accident damage. Last Tuesday it was in for MoT. Last Thursday
>>> the car would not start � had been perfectly fine at last use on
>>> Wednesday. Battery appeared to have failed � I got a moment or two of
>>> ignition light, then that would not light up and door locks would not
>>> work. Lidl charger wouldn�t even look at it. Not then, nor several
>>> hours later.
>>>
>>
>> snip
>>>
>>> The battery appears to me to be a perfectly ordinary Yuasa 065.
>>>
>>> Any suggestions for what the hell the battery was doing? If it had
>>> been pancaked and then refused to work at all, I would have
>>> understood. But it seemed mostly OK for a few days.
>>>
>>
>> My thinking is that a car door was left ajar while it was in the
>> paintshop, which drained the battery down to a very low level; or
>> maybe the internal light was left on. Once it's been there, it's hard to
>> predict what the battery is capable of doing.
>
> Many many years ago I had a Morris Marina (1.8TC Coupe). One one
> occasion the battery would flatten after a couple of days (I only used
> it occasionally).
> I measured the quiescent discharge of the battery at almost exactly
> half an amp, which I thought was a bit too much like some real figure.
> It turned out to be the 6W hatch-back light. The clip-in Pin switch
> had dislocated itself, leaving the lamp glowimg permanently whilst
> the hatch was closed.
>
Certainly seems feasible and something like that had passed my mind. It
was the peculiar delay before sudden failure, followed by seeming to
recover to be fairly OK, then utter failure.

--
Rod

Windmill

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Jun 19, 2013, 6:44:24 PM6/19/13
to
You get the feeling that if it was really important, that if a Mars
Rover depended on it, that every battery would be that good. But
instead it's whatever the market will bear. The ugly face of two-faced
Capitalism. Janusism.
(Wasn't Janus a two-faced Roman god? ISTR the name cropping up in an SF
story).


--
Windmill, Til...@Nonetel.com Use t m i l l
J.R.R. Tolkien:- @ O n e t e l . c o m
All that is gold does not glister / Not all who wander are lost

polygonum

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Jun 20, 2013, 3:01:21 AM6/20/13
to
On 19/06/2013 23:44, Windmill wrote:
> Adrian <tooma...@gmail.com> writes:
>
>> On Tue, 18 Jun 2013 19:05:08 +0000, Jules Richardson wrote:
>
>>>> I got 11 years out of the replacement Bosch battery in my BMW.
>
>>> Our ol' Toyota's battery made it to 15 before it finally gave up.
>
>> The (Citroen branded) battery on 'erselfs 2cv has a sticker on it saying
>> "IMPORTANT - USE BEFORE MARCH 2002". I know we didn't buy it new, so it
>> probably got swapped around off another car at some stage. It's sat on
>> the car, disconnected, but totally unused every winter, and up to 2yrs on
>> a couple of occasions. A few times, it's been left connected for extended
>> periods and the radio memory's drained it so flat that the oil pressure
>> light won't even come on when you turn the key.
>
>> I don't know who actually made it, but I'd happily buy their batteries
>> again...
>
> You get the feeling that if it was really important, that if a Mars
> Rover depended on it, that every battery would be that good. But
> instead it's whatever the market will bear. The ugly face of two-faced
> Capitalism. Janusism.
> (Wasn't Janus a two-faced Roman god? ISTR the name cropping up in an SF
> story).
>
>
Or even the world fleet of Dreamliners? :-)

What hacks me off about so many things is the lack of any
specifications. We see brands x, y and z in a shop and have no idea that
x will last twice as long as y or z because of some feature. So we buy
the cheaper x. Then makers of y and z see they can make their products
cheaper... Race to the bottom.

Even if it displays an impressive list of standards, almost none of us
know what they mean.

And if they do start telling us their battery lasts twice as long, we
often don't believe them because it's all marketing lies.

Even something as simple as washing-up liquid. When there is a special
750 ml for price of 500ml, are we convinced the contents are the same
and not watered down? And that is within a single brand. How about
"grease cutting factor 5" for top-end, factor 1 for worst watered down crap?

--
Rod

Windmill

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Jun 20, 2013, 8:31:16 PM6/20/13
to
"25% extra free!" on a packet of muffins or rolls. But is the
(unspecified) weight any greater than normal?

Dave Plowman (News)

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Jun 21, 2013, 8:38:16 AM6/21/13
to
In article <Mopw4...@freebie.onetel.net.uk>,
Windmill <spam-n...@Onetel.net.uk.invalid> wrote:

> "25% extra free!" on a packet of muffins or rolls. But is the
> (unspecified) weight any greater than normal?

Wicks were recently heavily advertising a special offer - on TV and
fliers. 20% off. Or may have been 25%. Said it included tiles and
flooring. Went to have a look and the prices shown were obviously old -
the tickets were dirty. I was told this was already discounted so no
further one applied.

--
*People want trepanners like they want a hole in the head*

Adrian

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Jun 21, 2013, 8:49:45 AM6/21/13
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On Fri, 21 Jun 2013 13:38:16 +0100, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:

> Wicks were recently heavily advertising a special offer - on TV and
> fliers. 20% off. Or may have been 25%.

Ah, but the 20% was apparently off their name...

Grimly Curmudgeon

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Jun 23, 2013, 7:12:52 AM6/23/13
to
E couldn't hold a candle to that.
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