Battery Longevity

My stock battery is right around 5 years old now. I would replace it but since I have multiple jump packs I keep the smaller one in the car so I'll probably just wait till it fails then jump my way to the store to buy a new one.
 
I need to buy a Powerball ticket. I did this for 5 years in SoFlo with a Kirkland battery and then replaced it preemptively with a WM Value battery. 18 months was the longest interval it sat untouched during Rona and it still fired right up. The alternator on the other hand seized; go figure. Technically it was disconnected every time within those five years, but still without a charger.

Sure, measure the voltage over time to see how much self discharge it has. Self discharge with a healthy battery is usually a lot less than the parasitic draw of a semi-modern, meaning even 30 year old, vehicle. However if the battery was disconnected from the vehicle and kept float charging, might last a decade or longer as long as the float charge isn't set too high and it outgasses too much. On the other hand, I very vaguely recall once reading something about plate deterioration if there's not a little vibration from time to time.
 
Forum needs a search feature because I am certain that many many years ago, someone posted a similar topic.

Then it happened again a dozen more times. :)

Don't leave a vehicle sitting for weeks, let alone months with the battery connected unless it's on a float charger. Anything PCM controlled plus minor other amenities like a radio that stores clock and station memory is going to average tens of mA constant current draw, which adds up over time. Disconnecting the battery can make a big difference due to that, but I still wouldn't leave a flooded lead acid starter battery sitting without a top-off charge for more than ~3 months at a time.

Lifespan and environment isn't the factor in this topic as much as that, although the OP did have a 7 y/o battery so factor for that as well. Short trips aren't so much either, unless talking about quite a few per day. Healthy battery, starter, and engine that fires right up in ~4 seconds will have put the current it drew out of the battery to start the engine, put back into the battery within single digit minutes, at least up to the level the vehicle manufacturer set it to maintain based on the smart or lack thereof charging designed into the vehicle, but it is still a little wear every time you start the engine, yet it is easier to start an engine that is already warm from the past trip driven, and the battery is nearer peak voltage the more recently it was driven vs sitting for days or more. Many different variables.

I currently have a float charger hooked up to an old vehicle that is seldom driven, and it's not even in my garage. I used about 40ft of reclaimed CAT5 ethernet cable, long enough to reach the trickle charger in the garage. It's wired to a cigarette lighter outlet plug, and fused at both ends. Actually triple fused if you count the lighter outlet fuse too.

You might wonder if it's low enough gauge for that, but with 8 conductors, 4 in parallel for positive and 4 for negative, it does fine supplying the tens of mA to float charge. The resistance of it isn't significant at a current that low. I'm more concerned about UV damaging the insulation over time, but I have a pile of old cable and can just build a new one in 5 minutes if that day comes.
+1. Any of my cars or truck that sit for more than a week I leave on a Battery Minder or Pulse Tech battery maintainer. If you use the ring mount adapters they come with, and thread them through the grill of the car, makes for connecting them a simple matter. On one car I had to get more creative, but using the ring mounts makes it a few seconds to connect and no having to open the hood even.
 
Hi folks,

Time for a battery replacement and would like to know how long does a car battery usually last? I'm sure there's factors like climate, Short trips and other issues that can shorten a batteries life.

My Acura MDX has been sitting and I haven't started the SUV in a few months and notice there's no crank, Start or power. the battery that was installed was a genuine Acura battery and the date of the battery was September 2019 so that's a seven year old battery, Looks like I need to replace the battery.

What you guys think?

View attachment 343819

View attachment 343820
Batteries last 1 month more than the warranty date. Test 1 month before the warranty date.
 
Back
Top Bottom