โDec-31-2017 12:53 PM
โJan-04-2018 09:36 AM
marcsbigfoot20b27 wrote:
AGM
No outgassing to crud yer terminals..
No "Its got electrolytes!!" to check or add water..
and I dont care what people say about heat and AGM, all my vehicles have AGM and in Phoenix in 118 degrees with the AC on high, Im sure its a balmy 200+ under the hood. Still going strong after 5 years.
โJan-04-2018 08:45 AM
โJan-03-2018 08:44 PM
โJan-03-2018 07:13 PM
โJan-03-2018 12:15 PM
โJan-03-2018 11:08 AM
โJan-02-2018 12:30 AM
โJan-01-2018 09:22 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
I can load up and inside four hours go from tropical summer to seventy degree 40% humidity in the pines. Can anyone up there drive from Anti Algore to seventy degrees in four hours? By switching AC units I tinker in cool dehumidified air or sleep in it. Five hundred watts worth. What can your 500 watt heater do? My pipes don't break, and there is no "Tropic Ice" for an idiot to smack into me on the roadways. Batteries don't quit and skin does not get Tropic Warm Bitten. Eighty degree ocean temperature. Three or four showers a day. Hmmm I wonder who has it harder...?
โJan-01-2018 06:39 PM
DiskDoctr wrote:Good stuff! I don't know what Mr. Screw-around-with-a-door did. I wasn't looking and he had futzed something up by the time I discovered an issue. The instrument cluster warning light does depict the door location and I am fairly certain I know which one is causing grief. I'm just getting lazier and don't like pulling door panels but it isn't that difficult to fix, IIRC.westend wrote:
To answer a few questions:
Ford's implementation of "door ajar" and what it does/doesn't do. This is all about the truck in my sig line, 2003 Ford F-250 Crew Cab 4x4 5.4 V8. When a door is left open or closed/unlatched, open/latched the door ajar circuit is powered, a signal voltage is sent to the instrument cluster illuminating the located open door and the trucks ECU keeps the circuit powering the cabin overhead light powered for about 10 minutes or until 1/4 mi of forward travel has occurred. When I first brought the truck home, a mechanically disinclined ex-buddy monkeyed around with a rear door child safety switch and the door ajar problem has persisted, since. The result is that the cabin overhead light remains on when parked or, sometimes comes on by itself for a short time. I guess it is time to do some surgery and repair/replace the offending mechanism. At the same time, I'll replace the cabin lights with LED's.
If you have access to something like AutoEnginuity, it can tell you which door is reading as ajar. Once you find it, simply replace the sensor unit on that door.
Some get lucky with WD40 or whatever, but on my Excursion the sensor is different than the latch, no moving parts. Remove and unplug old, in with the new.
Often it isn't the door people suspect. FYI on the Excursion there are TWO sensors on the back hatch and only on the top, not the bottom doors ๐
Unless you have a bad GEM module, this should fix the problem. I've not experienced the GEM as mine has the hybrid cluster. Not sure if that fails the same way as the GEM or not?
Fix it up, thumb your nose at this bad weather :C
โJan-01-2018 06:34 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
Holy Water For Vampire Battery Terminal Corrosion...
โJan-01-2018 06:28 PM
Terryallan wrote:westend wrote:
To answer a few questions:
Ford's implementation of "door ajar" and what it does/doesn't do. This is all about the truck in my sig line, 2003 Ford F-250 Crew Cab 4x4 5.4 V8. When a door is left open or closed/unlatched, open/latched the door ajar circuit is powered, a signal voltage is sent to the instrument cluster illuminating the located open door and the trucks ECU keeps the circuit powering the cabin overhead light powered for about 10 minutes or until 1/4 mi of forward travel has occurred. When I first brought the truck home, a mechanically disinclined ex-buddy monkeyed around with a rear door child safety switch and the door ajar problem has persisted, since. The result is that the cabin overhead light remains on when parked or, sometimes comes on by itself for a short time. I guess it is time to do some surgery and repair/replace the offending mechanism. At the same time, I'll replace the cabin lights with LED's.
.
From what I am reading. It is NOT Fords system so much, as it is your buddy messing with the circuits.
โJan-01-2018 03:48 PM
westend wrote:
To answer a few questions:
Ford's implementation of "door ajar" and what it does/doesn't do. This is all about the truck in my sig line, 2003 Ford F-250 Crew Cab 4x4 5.4 V8. When a door is left open or closed/unlatched, open/latched the door ajar circuit is powered, a signal voltage is sent to the instrument cluster illuminating the located open door and the trucks ECU keeps the circuit powering the cabin overhead light powered for about 10 minutes or until 1/4 mi of forward travel has occurred. When I first brought the truck home, a mechanically disinclined ex-buddy monkeyed around with a rear door child safety switch and the door ajar problem has persisted, since. The result is that the cabin overhead light remains on when parked or, sometimes comes on by itself for a short time. I guess it is time to do some surgery and repair/replace the offending mechanism. At the same time, I'll replace the cabin lights with LED's.
โJan-01-2018 08:29 AM
โJan-01-2018 07:37 AM
westend wrote:
It's been worse than a walk-in freezer up here, lately. I just tried to start my truck and the battery is dead. Put the shop charger on it and at the 40 amp setting, I had electrolyte streaming out of the cap vents. It must be frozen to act like that. The case sides are not bulged and I've now pulled it to thaw inside the shop. After it thaws and is charged, I'll put the hydrometer on it and fill the cells.
I noticed the battery cable terminations were kind of crudded up. I'll have to pay more attention to those in the future. That, and Ford's stupid door ajar system that is probably the reason for the discharged state (it keeps the overhead light on even with all doors firmly closed).