| 
 Charlie, one more thing I forgot to mention: I can't even begin to tell you 
how many batteries go bad during the summer. I just had to raplce Paige's in her 
88 Eagle. The HEAT kills them, and then might have a dead cell.  
  
Years ago we went to Las Vegas, and like dumbasses, went in end of July. I 
have never seen a sign read 132 degrees, which it did at Hoover Dam while we 
were ther. Oohhh, but it is a dry heat. Dry heat my ass, you can't breath with 
8% humidity and damned hot dry wind blowing off those mountians. We would copme 
out of the casino at 4:00am and it was STILL 101 degrees, I still have the 
photos of that, was rather remarkable. 
  
But something I remember is that most of the larger hotels there (we stayed 
in the Golden Nugget off Premont street) have 'charger golf carts'. No, not 
Mopar painted like Dukes of Hazzard, but a rolling fleet of golf carts with big 
ass chargers to jump people in the parking lots. Our brand new rental car had to 
be jumped twice int he mornings, all these guys do is drive around and give 
their customers jumps, because the heat kills the batteries. Imagine it being 
100 degrees all day and what it is under the hood with AC going, accessories 
like radio, brakes lights, turns and such, that battery is taking a frigging 
beating. After we got jumped, no problem car ran great and started again 
everywhere we went. 
  
But it could possibly be a dead cell,a gain, take it, along with alt, to a 
Auto Zone or O'Reillys to have them put on the machine to double check 
both. 
  ----- Original Message -----  
  
  
  Sent: Friday, June 23, 2006 5:16 AM 
  Subject: Re: [BaadAssGremlins] Battery 
  issues 
  
  
  
  Thanks Doc, and to everyone who responded to my plea. I ran this by my 
  dad last night, who is a retired electronics technician who worked for the 
  Army for 33 years. He shared much of the same that everyone here did. "Process 
  of elimination" he said. I am going to start with the regulator and 
  alternator. I noticed last night that the volt meter is reading only 12 volts 
  when the battery is clearly low. My sense is it ain't charging as it should. I 
  do not think I have a drain on the battery. I have been disconnecting the 
  battery too and putting a trickle charge on it so I don't destroy the battery. 
   
  Funny how this happens after all the talk about these crummy Motorola 
  alternators! 
  Charlie 
    
  In a message dated 6/23/2006 6:06:53 AM Eastern Daylight Time, 
  AMC74HORNET@xxxxxxxxx writes: 
  Charlie at night in the dark with the car shut off check to see if 
    the Alt. light is slightly glowing. Since you say you have a Motorola 
    Alt the diode trio might be going bad. The Alt. with this condition 
    will still show it is charging properly on a meter. Had that problem with 
    my orange Hornet before I swapped in a Delco. Also you need to have 
    the battery tested with a meter that puts a load on it to make sure it 
    is good. Without a load on the battery even a bad battery may show 
    12 volts. Next disconnect the clock and put an amp meter between 
    the positive terminal on the battery and to the battery cable itself. 
    This should tell you if there is a draw some where in the system. As 
    for finding it good luck. I hate electrical problems. Having TSM with 
    the wiring diagrams would also help. One last thing to check is if you 
    have a glove box light. Make sure it does not stay on 24/7. My father 
    had that problem with his bosses car back in the late 60's. After it sat 
    for a week the battery was stone dead. On my Hornet before I changed 
    alt's I would disconnect the battery when I parked it. More as a 
    theft preventative I wired in the main wire off the starter solenoid a 
    fusible link to a 35 amp toggle switch on the dash that kills the 
    electric to the whole car when it is parked. Happy 
    hunting. "Doc"
   
  
      
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