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It's not the heat. 29 Palms sees 100+ degrees for months at a time and I never had any trouble keeping batteries in every vehicle I owned there.XJThrottle said:It's the heat, Steve.
I have a 2004 truck I bought new. It got batteries before it was out of warranty. It's also has two 140a alternators.
Good for you but that doesn't negate the fact it most likely was NOT the heat that killed them.XJThrottle said:I spent over a decade in the automotive biz in Phoenix. Mainline Honda tech.
I've probably replaced a few hundred batteries in that time. Many while the car was in warranty. I'll stick with what I wrote.
Cognitive skills are lacking it seems. You stated as fact, "that the heat is killing batteries" based on replacing the batteries in roughly 4% of the approximately 7800 vehicles you saw in a decade. Yet have no actual knowledge of the specific reasons said batteries died. Sounds more like a parts changer then a skilled mechanic...it's hot and your battery died...so it must be the heat.XJThrottle said:If 4% of my farts require an underwear change, that's a problem.
4% of a year is roughly 14 days. If your car didn't start 14 days out of every year because the battery was dead, you'd be cool with that?
If that's a passing grade for you Steve, so be it.
I stand by my statement, you either have a vehicle issue, an amp draw issue in use or are buying crap batteries. Repeatedly only getting 1.5 years out of a battery is not normal.Ranger1 said:Ok so by what you just said. My charging system is just fine. My diesel eats a set of batteries every 1 1/2 years. Everytime under warranty. I run the sh%% out of my air conditioner sometimes I have short trips. I run dual batteries 900 cca. My shortest trips are to bashes 7 miles away. I start my truck and let it run for 5 min before I put my foot in it. Dodge says my charging system has no problems. I have 560,354 miles on my dodge truck. I have seen around 10 batteries go in and out of it. Heat is hard on batteries. That's why I have moved my batteries back under my flat bed away from the engine heat. They are doing better now.
If they think that replacing batteries every year and a half is "normal" then they aren't as trained as you think. Plenty of piss poor factory trained mechanics out there by the way. Lots of mechs that simply throw parts at a problem instead of getting to the bottom of what caused it.Ranger1 said:Thanks for your opinion. I will stand by my Dodge dealers professional diesel mechanic. He was trained by dodge. I also took it to a professional diesel shop for some turbo work. They even said nothing wrong with it. Huh. Should I believe you or them.....I guess you should go into business for yourself u will be a millionaire
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