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Is this how batteries die?

rhurey

Member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
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Location
Bothell, WA
Went to start the truck to move it before the windstorm we're supposed to get.

Checked the NOCO before getting in, and showed charge 100% and in the green.

Turned on the battery disconnect, hit the master switch. Battery gauge in the green.

Truck to ON, ABS clickity clickity, Start...

Click.... Click... Everything's dead.

Much trouble shooting that went nowhere...

Unhooked all the wires, put the charger on each individually. All 4 showed full 12V charge. Hit all 4 with a 100A tester.

The two that were in parallel from 0-12V both went dead instantly.
The two that were in parallel from 12-24V showed great condition.

Rewired the two good one in series, fired the truck up and moved it. Unwired them.

So the batteries are the original 6TMF's from when I got the truck 2nd hand a couple of years ago.

With a date of Sept 07 on them.

So I knida assume that at 9 years I should be happy and move on.

But why did two fail at the same time, and should I be worried about some oddity killing them?


Oh, and if that's that, any comments on NAPA's 8d's that are like $200/ea?

Thanks.
 

wreckerman893

Possum Connoisseur
15,629
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113
Location
Akenback acres near Gadsden, AL
Unless it gets blistering cold where you are at I'd use the two good batteries until they go teats up and then buy four or stick with two new ones.

I had to switch the M927A2 to two batteries recently due to two of them croaking and being financially disenfranchised.

It cranks every time.
 

74M35A2

Well-known member
4,145
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Location
Livonia, MI
9 years old, they don't owe you anything. Discard, replace with conventional group 31's @ $100 each, and be done with it. Only way to quantify is to measure available CCA with an internal resistance tester, but being that old is not even worth doing so.
 

NovacaineFix

Member
662
1
18
Location
San Diego, California
sounds like you're doing everything right, had the same issue on my CUCV a couple months ago.

It was my daily work driver at the time and drove to a customer's home did my work went to leave and ... nothing. My battery gage wasn't not installed, but got the trusty DVOM out and checked the voltage. Surface voltage was good, 12.6 on the front and 12.8 on the rear, but why wouldn't it start?
Turned the headlights on for a few seconds to take that surface charge away to get the "real" voltage, 7.2 on the front, 12.6 on the rear. So my front battery lost a couple cells just out of the blue, wouldn't take a charge and couldn't jump it, just a large lead weight at that point.

I find it amazing how batteries work, they can be fine one moment and the next, nothing. The last 6 batteries I have replaced have all been that way, good up until the last crank.

So what I figure now is after 3-5 years, if they last that long, I start wondering when they are not going to work anymore.
That is good that you got 9 years out of yours.
 

SCSG-G4

PSVB 3003
Steel Soldiers Supporter
5,368
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Location
Lexington, South Carolina
9 years old, they don't owe you anything. Discard, replace with conventional group 31's @ $100 each, and be done with it. Only way to quantify is to measure available CCA with an internal resistance tester, but being that old is not even worth doing so.
Or get the Group 31 blems for about half that price - you just have to ask to see if they have them!
 

Csm Davis

Well-known member
4,166
393
83
Location
Hattiesburg, Mississippi
sounds like you're doing everything right, had the same issue on my CUCV a couple months ago.

It was my daily work driver at the time and drove to a customer's home did my work went to leave and ... nothing. My battery gage wasn't not installed, but got the trusty DVOM out and checked the voltage. Surface voltage was good, 12.6 on the front and 12.8 on the rear, but why wouldn't it start?
Turned the headlights on for a few seconds to take that surface charge away to get the "real" voltage, 7.2 on the front, 12.6 on the rear. So my front battery lost a couple cells just out of the blue, wouldn't take a charge and couldn't jump it, just a large lead weight at that point.

I find it amazing how batteries work, they can be fine one moment and the next, nothing. The last 6 batteries I have replaced have all been that way, good up until the last crank.

So what I figure now is after 3-5 years, if they last that long, I start wondering when they are not going to work anymore.
That is good that you got 9 years out of yours.
On CUCV'S especially but I find all 24v systems it helps to rotate the batteries yearly or even 6 months the 12v only battery seams to get the most wear and tear for some reason and it also is a good time to clean up and fix any corrosion that might have started.

Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk
 

Karl kostman

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
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893
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Location
Fargo ND
This brings back memories! I had just got a 925A1 and it LOOKED like the batteries were brand new, it started great no problems for about 2 months then it was a no start situation, I still remember the clicking sounds! I charged batteries till they all showed 100% charge and the ammeter showed 12.3 to 12.5 volts and still the same thing (not Good). I finally picked up a load tester and 2 out of the 4 batts failed completely, when I got them out of the truck they were dated from 6 years ago. It sure says a lot for appearances can sure be deceiving!!
KK
 

rhurey

Member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
737
14
18
Location
Bothell, WA
Plan Leave The Two Working Batteries Running came to a screeching halt this afternoon.

8d's are heavy, and tomorrow I will need to fabricate a hold down bracket for them.
 

SUPERSPORT

Member
107
2
18
Location
Ohio
On CUCV'S especially but I find all 24v systems it helps to rotate the batteries yearly or even 6 months the 12v only battery seams to get the most wear and tear for some reason and it also is a good time to clean up and fix any corrosion that might have started.

Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk
What is proper rotation for 4 batteries? Just swap the left and right 24 volt banks?
 

2deuce

Well-known member
1,479
154
63
Location
portland, oregon
Batteries die from sitting, especially with a low charge or no charge. They sulfate up. I saw where the military rejuvenates batteries by some high tech process and am curious how well it works. Anybody up on this?
 
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