B.C.
Well-Known Member
Remember the good old days when you just took the battery out of your vehicle and put in a new one, closed the hood, and drove to the pub and had a $40 lunch to celebrate changing the battery yourself, saving $30 not paying a shop to do it.
Well I write this post as an education about modern vehicles, and why I miss those older vehicles simplicity.
Before you simply change the battery in your vehicle nowadays, or do it for your buddy to help them out, first research the vehicle a little bit. Many modern vehicles use a computer system to control the battery charging. No I am not joking, sure I kid around a lot here on the forum, but this is my serious post of the week, I will try not to let it happen to often
Your modern day vehicles ( not all but most) have a smart charging system that knows what type of battery was installed at the factory, and will not properly charge the new battery if you switch types, lets say flooded cell, to AGM, lithium, or even possibly gel. So the charging system might need to be updated to what type of battery you put in it. But it goes much further than that so keep reading.
Lets say that you replace it with an identical battery, although nowadays you likely won't.
But lets say that you did, so think you are done...you are wrong.
These new charging systems go a step further, in that many of them allow for battery aging and know that over time your battery cannot hold a charge as good as it once did. So it slowly over times keeps charging your battery a bit slower, and not charging it as much as it did a new battery. No I am not drunk or smoking BC bud, I am total sober and telling it to you straight. So your vehicle may need to be told you just installed a new battery, so it treats it like new and charges it correctly. Some vehicles allow you to do this yourself and the instructions are then likely in your owners manual. That is the book in the glove box that you usually ignore and it gets in the way of your important stuff like bottle opener, boat keys, condoms, and flashlight. Well pull that book out and read the part on battery replacement, or call your dealership. The computer likely needs to be updated now, and with any luck it is a do it yourself way, or you may need to drive to the dealership now with your new battery installed ( yes it will start and drive okay without hurting your vehicle) and get them to plug into your obd port and update your system to let it know you put in a new battery. And maybe tell it that the battery is not just new, but also a different type of battery.
I know that I am the joker around here, but an occasional post that might be helpful I thought can't hurt either.
Cheers.
Well I write this post as an education about modern vehicles, and why I miss those older vehicles simplicity.
Before you simply change the battery in your vehicle nowadays, or do it for your buddy to help them out, first research the vehicle a little bit. Many modern vehicles use a computer system to control the battery charging. No I am not joking, sure I kid around a lot here on the forum, but this is my serious post of the week, I will try not to let it happen to often
Your modern day vehicles ( not all but most) have a smart charging system that knows what type of battery was installed at the factory, and will not properly charge the new battery if you switch types, lets say flooded cell, to AGM, lithium, or even possibly gel. So the charging system might need to be updated to what type of battery you put in it. But it goes much further than that so keep reading.
Lets say that you replace it with an identical battery, although nowadays you likely won't.
But lets say that you did, so think you are done...you are wrong.
These new charging systems go a step further, in that many of them allow for battery aging and know that over time your battery cannot hold a charge as good as it once did. So it slowly over times keeps charging your battery a bit slower, and not charging it as much as it did a new battery. No I am not drunk or smoking BC bud, I am total sober and telling it to you straight. So your vehicle may need to be told you just installed a new battery, so it treats it like new and charges it correctly. Some vehicles allow you to do this yourself and the instructions are then likely in your owners manual. That is the book in the glove box that you usually ignore and it gets in the way of your important stuff like bottle opener, boat keys, condoms, and flashlight. Well pull that book out and read the part on battery replacement, or call your dealership. The computer likely needs to be updated now, and with any luck it is a do it yourself way, or you may need to drive to the dealership now with your new battery installed ( yes it will start and drive okay without hurting your vehicle) and get them to plug into your obd port and update your system to let it know you put in a new battery. And maybe tell it that the battery is not just new, but also a different type of battery.
I know that I am the joker around here, but an occasional post that might be helpful I thought can't hurt either.
Cheers.