Headache...
#1
Headache...
Okay apologies in advance but kind of on a time crunch on this one. Got my 05 LR3 16 days ago from a dealer up in Albuquerque, 103000 miles and in decent shape, so I thought... So here's the story.... It just spent 10 days in stupid heat at long term parking in El Paso airport parking, did the 90 mile hike home just fine, did a Walmart pit stop for essential stuff before getting home, started fine and then my dash lit up like a f&$&?!g crimbo tree, it made it home ok, but then died, i.e. Put key in ignition and nothing happened, nada... So bright and early today got my voltmeter out and went probing... Battery read 0.01 volts, so removed it, gave it a rapid charge and a load teat, it said weak, so after a $180 trip to autozone, I thought I was up and running, more fool me!!... We had dashboard lights on again after 35 mins of running.... So wtf... Is it the alternator????... I would appreciate any help in sorting this out.... Thanks
#2
Hmmm....what kind of battery did you buy at Autozone? I got sick of dicking around with batteries and finally got an AGM battery by Deka. That said, a new battery should be plug 'n play and I'd try a hard reset. In a nutshell just connect the + and - terminals together (you'll need a length of wire) for about 2 minutes. If you want the unabridged version you'll have to search on it.
I doubt it's the alternator. I think you're on the right track with the battery but doing the hard reset will clear any latched faults.
I doubt it's the alternator. I think you're on the right track with the battery but doing the hard reset will clear any latched faults.
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neilansell (07-12-2016)
#3
Hmmm....what kind of battery did you buy at Autozone? I got sick of dicking around with batteries and finally got an AGM battery by Deka. That said, a new battery should be plug 'n play and I'd try a hard reset. In a nutshell just connect the + and - terminals together (you'll need a length of wire) for about 2 minutes. If you want the unabridged version you'll have to search on it.
I doubt it's the alternator. I think you're on the right track with the battery but doing the hard reset will clear any latched faults.
I doubt it's the alternator. I think you're on the right track with the battery but doing the hard reset will clear any latched faults.
Last edited by neilansell; 07-12-2016 at 09:58 PM.
#4
This sounds like a classic alternator failure. The truck runs fine on the reserve capacity of the battery until it drops to a certain point then everything goes haywire until it dies totally. Did you put a meter on it with the engine running to see if the alternator is charging? That’s the obvious and easiest thing to do. You should see approx 14v with the engine running. Due to the funky load sensing regulators on these trucks it could be anything from 13.5 to 14.5v, but the basic take away is you need to see more than battery voltage.
As for AGM vs flooded, I do prefer (and run) AGM but don’t consider it a ‘must have’ just to keep the truck alive. That’s more of an upgrade for heavier loads like a fridge, winch, extra lighting, etc.
If you saw less than a volt on your battery, it’s gone – chances of bringing it back from that state, particularly with a ‘fast charge’ are very slim. So don’t feel like you wasted money buying a battery. But you still need to verify the alternator output or you’ll destroy the new battery in short order as well.
With the truck idling, put a meter on the battery and report back to us what you see. Until you do that everything else is just guessing.
As for AGM vs flooded, I do prefer (and run) AGM but don’t consider it a ‘must have’ just to keep the truck alive. That’s more of an upgrade for heavier loads like a fridge, winch, extra lighting, etc.
If you saw less than a volt on your battery, it’s gone – chances of bringing it back from that state, particularly with a ‘fast charge’ are very slim. So don’t feel like you wasted money buying a battery. But you still need to verify the alternator output or you’ll destroy the new battery in short order as well.
With the truck idling, put a meter on the battery and report back to us what you see. Until you do that everything else is just guessing.
#5
#7
Just trying to save you any unneeded further headache.