That is exactly what is happening, but the grid heater light only illuminates before startup, it will not illuminate as the heater cycles during warmup.Oh for gods sakes, very good chance. Thanks for the reminder. I’ll watch the dash next time and see if it coincides.
It still dims the lights on the newer trucks if you have halogens. I have dual 220A alternators and you can still see it dim slightly when the heater kicks on.That is exactly what is happening, but the grid heater light only illuminates before startup, it will not illuminate as the heater cycles during warmup.
ON the older trucks it used to dim the cluster lights/interior lights when it would cycle.
Exacty what I do. I did find the 5 amp NOCO painfully slow and ended up putting it in my 2012 Honda Accord when it is stored for each winter. Put a 10 amp in the truck. Batteries left idle at a higher state of charge will last longer.
There is something up with the batteries then my 5 amp keeps my 2 4D batteries topped up fairly quicklyExacty what I do. I did find the 5 amp NOCO painfully slow and ended up putting it in my 2012 Honda Accord when it is stored for each winter. Put a 10 amp in the truck. Batteries left idle at a higher state of charge will last longer.
For battery charging and storage/maintaining, I am a Victron fan, I went through years of all the crappy junk battery tenders out there. At the moment I use the 10 Amp version as it’s a good balance between cost and performance.
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Uses the same Victron app that one would use for our trailers and home solar systems. So, from inside the house, I can pull up the app and check the voltage, graph, battery status, etc. via the Bluetooth connection. All our cars that we store for the winter we have these connected.
In hindsight when I was using the 5 amp, I am pretty sure the batteries were on their way out. Although at the two year mark, I did not count on batteries being bad. So I installed the 10 amp back then. Now I have two new AGMs so the 5 amp might work with them. My use of the truck is somewhat unpredictable since it is my grocery getter and for getting around when we spend the winter in the south. I usually start up the charger if the truck has been sitting more than three or four days. During the summer the truck sits on the charger most of the time.Interesting you found it slow, that indicates that your batteries are at a low SOC when you hook the trickle charger up.
Its plenty fine to keep the batteries topped offMy 19 is still on original batteries and no issue (knock on wood). As I've mentioned many times before I don't drive this truck once the snow falls, it stays parked until the spring and on the battery tender (CTEK).
Just bought a few 1A NOCO tenders on huge sale, one will stay on my ATV and one on my 15 RAM, don't tell me it ain't enough to maintain the batteries when truck isn't in use??
But now if you have a battery leak it will damage whatever is below it.Forgot to mention something else, when I pulled the batteries the tray beneath was full of thick ice. This goes back to the old problem of the emblems on the hood letter water into the hood and engine bay.
The battery tray has a bunch of cavities and braces for strength but all they do is create water traps. I drill small holes in each cavity to allow the water to drain (have to be damn careful and tape your bit so it doesn’t go too far or you might find a wiring harness under there lol!). I suspect once the water filled the tray it would spill over but I wasn’t taking a chance a $350 battery could get it’s case split.