Any tips on getting a very dead battery to charge? I was away for about 2 months and in that time almost 1 litre of water had evaporated from the battery so I topped it up but the battery only reads 0.65v and my charger won't start charging it.. should I jumper cable a charged battery to it for a while or what? I think its still under warranty but if its just an issue of juicing it with a charge I'd rather do that.
If it is an 84 month warranty and you paid 84 dollars for it then every month you have used it costs you a buck. So don't be surprised when the man hands you a new battery and a bill.
Quote from: ORCoaster on July 07, 2011, 08:15:23 pmIf it is an 84 month warranty and you paid 84 dollars for it then every month you have used it costs you a buck. So don't be surprised when the man hands you a new battery and a bill. That's not exactly how it works. There is a free replacement period, usually between 1 and 2 years and after that the pro-rated period starts. Depending on how far into the pro-rata period you are, you might want to consider buying a new battery outright. This is because the warranty applies to the original sale date, so if you are on month 80 of month 84, you are paying most of the full cost of the battery for only a 4 month warranty. Of course, different battery might have different policies and individual shops do sometimes deviate from the warranty policy but this was how things were supposed to work when I sold batteries and I did not know of anyone else doing it differently. Anyway, leaving any battery connected to the car's electrical system will eventually discharge (and possibly ruin it) if left for over a month or so as there are enough parasitic loads on the battery to do that (like the clock on your radio). Of course, it was low on it's fluid so that wouldn't help either but I really can't see how a liter of water evaporates out of a battery that fast considering it's regularly exposed to high underhood temperatures and you don't see that happening. Was it in direct sunlight?