โJan-14-2019 11:09 AM
โJan-18-2019 10:48 AM
โJan-18-2019 07:48 AM
PaulJ2 wrote:time2roll wrote:PaulJ2 wrote:Good reason to have a jump-box handy. Especially if it happens away from home.
Interesting is that the instant i connected the good charger i jumped into the car, turned the key and it started right up.
The now 12 volts activated some relays connecting up the 276 volt battery and the engine started immediately. Just needed 12 volts to operate some relays i guess.
BTW check the resting voltage of that battery in the morning after a few days of use. Or take it down and have it load tested. Running flat dead could have wiped out half the capacity.
I agree, a very good reason to have a jump box. It's on my list.
โJan-16-2019 11:55 AM
โJan-16-2019 06:23 AM
โJan-15-2019 08:55 AM
time2roll wrote:PaulJ2 wrote:Good reason to have a jump-box handy. Especially if it happens away from home.
Interesting is that the instant i connected the good charger i jumped into the car, turned the key and it started right up.
The now 12 volts activated some relays connecting up the 276 volt battery and the engine started immediately. Just needed 12 volts to operate some relays i guess.
BTW check the resting voltage of that battery in the morning after a few days of use. Or take it down and have it load tested. Running flat dead could have wiped out half the capacity.
โJan-15-2019 08:15 AM
JaxDad wrote:
Even โsmartโ chargers will work IF it has the โengine startโ or โboosterโ function.
I have several such chargers, in the โboostโ mode they just put out a 14.5โish volt full rated current regardless of battery voltage.
The best of both worlds.
โJan-15-2019 06:45 AM
PaulJ2 wrote:Good reason to have a jump-box handy. Especially if it happens away from home.
Interesting is that the instant i connected the good charger i jumped into the car, turned the key and it started right up.
The now 12 volts activated some relays connecting up the 276 volt battery and the engine started immediately. Just needed 12 volts to operate some relays i guess.
โJan-15-2019 05:40 AM
โJan-15-2019 05:09 AM
JaxDad wrote:
I have several such chargers, in the โboostโ mode they just put out a 14.5โish volt full rated current regardless of battery voltage.
The best of both worlds.
โJan-15-2019 04:51 AM
beemerphile1 wrote:LittleBill wrote:
smart chargers need to see a minimum amount of voltage to turn on. usually because its a bit dangerous to charge a 100% dead battery
^This
Parallel a good battery with the dead one. After the charger starts disconnect the good battery.
โJan-14-2019 10:40 PM
time2roll wrote:camperdave wrote:Getting to be a bigger issue with all the telemetrics that never shut down on these new cars.
It's good to keep the old dumb stuff around sometimes, for things like this. That's what I tell my wife about me anyway...
My wife's Ford Fusion hybrid wouldn't start a while back because of a dead starter battery. It amused me that there's 300v of lithium sitting in the truck, but the car wouldn't start because the lead acid battery under the hood was dead. She didn't find it amusing.
Especially frustrating with the EVs that really need a deep cycle battery since zero need for the start surge.
I think the OP has the answer. Although I am surprised a dome light did it. Even my old 2001 F150 will cut all power at about 30 minutes if this is detected.
โJan-14-2019 09:26 PM
LittleBill wrote:
smart chargers need to see a minimum amount of voltage to turn on. usually because its a bit dangerous to charge a 100% dead battery
โJan-14-2019 04:42 PM
โJan-14-2019 12:50 PM
PaulJ2 wrote:
I guess they have to see a couple volts before they will operate.
Geeeez!