FlOwner
Member Since: 30 Jul 2005
Location: Florida
Posts: 41
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Anyone had a dead battery and needed to jump start |
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According to the manual you need to remove the battery from the car to recharge or you may damage the electrical system (P273 as side note)
In any case I read that after I charged the battery. When I started the vehicle -- Engine Fault warning came on would not let me drive more than 10mph. But, I tried to start again-- engine fault. I reset the clock and drove around the block and all is fine now. I've been driving the vehicle all day and no more problems.
Question how do you jump start the vehicle?
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27th Aug 2005 12:46 am |
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simon
Member Since: 11 Jan 2005
Location: Shropshire
Posts: 18296
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Strange... According to page 302 of the manual you can use a donor vehicle to start a DISCO3 with a dead battery...
"STARTING AN ENGINE WITH A DISCHARGED BATTERY Using Booster Cables.
Using booster cables (jump leads) from a donor battery, or a battery fitted to a donor
vehicle, is the only approved method of starting a vehicle with a discharged battery.
Caution: DO NOT push or tow start".
Is the US LR3 manual different to this ?
-s
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27th Aug 2005 8:00 am |
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10forcash
Member Since: 09 Jun 2005
Location: Ubique
Posts: 16534
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NAS manual has jump-start procedure on page 306
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27th Aug 2005 1:14 pm |
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FlOwner
Member Since: 30 Jul 2005
Location: Florida
Posts: 41
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I used a battery charger pluged into an electrical outlet |
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I found the procedure on how to jump start on page 308 of NA manual. This is not in the battery section page 271.
I guess with all electronics still running when the vehicle is off you have to be careful with a battery charger. My first instinct was to disconnect all the cables before charging , but fear of the dealer thinking messed which a electircal cable and caused a fault overruled my common sense. Anyway every thing is running fine.
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27th Aug 2005 2:11 pm |
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rich
Member Since: 02 Jul 2005
Location: North Island, New Zealand
Posts: 199
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Had a flat battery at the weekend.... I left keys in ignition in my secure garage.... big deal.... keys were not switched on... but maybe something ran it flat... My dealers said that keys left in ignition signal to the car that the system should wake up and be alive... hence flat battery. But I have done it (on purpose), since with no flat battery.
I just charged my battery with charger after disconnecting positive. All good. Near enough 40 degrees South!!!
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29th Aug 2005 7:04 am |
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BN
Member Since: 18 Mar 2005
Location: Here
Posts: 6463
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rich wrote:Had a flat battery at the weekend.... I left keys in ignition in my secure garage.... big deal.... keys were not switched on... but maybe something ran it flat... My dealers said that keys left in ignition signal to the car that the system should wake up and be alive... hence flat battery. But I have done it (on purpose), since with no flat battery.
I just charged my battery with charger after disconnecting positive. All good.
With the key in the car does not go to sleep, so many things are still active. I think winger can explain what is.
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29th Aug 2005 9:42 am |
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10forcash
Member Since: 09 Jun 2005
Location: Ubique
Posts: 16534
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BN wrote:rich wrote:Had a flat battery at the weekend.... I left keys in ignition in my secure garage.... big deal.... keys were not switched on... but maybe something ran it flat... My dealers said that keys left in ignition signal to the car that the system should wake up and be alive... hence flat battery. But I have done it (on purpose), since with no flat battery.
I just charged my battery with charger after disconnecting positive. All good.
With the key in the car does not go to sleep, so many things are still active. I think winger can explain what is.
Maybe the pre-heater kicked in......
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29th Aug 2005 10:43 am |
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simon
Member Since: 11 Jan 2005
Location: Shropshire
Posts: 18296
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or not enough hamsters in the US ?...
A little story from The Register this morning.
"We've often wondered for what purpose exactly hamsters were put upon this earth, and now we know: to charge mobile phones.
Sixteen-year-old Peter Ash, of Somerset, finally cracked this age-old poser after his long-suffering sister complained of pet hamster Elvis scuttling away for hours during his nocturnal exercise wheel regime.
Ash told Ananova: "I thought the wheel could be made to do something useful so I connected a system of gears and a turbine." He then patched the output to his mobe's charger and voila! - free hamster energy at around thirty minutes' talktime for every two hamster wheel minutes.
Surprisingly - and considering all the current moaning about falling exam standards, etc, etc - Ash only got a "C" for this contribution to his GSCE science course and, undoubtedly, a clean-energy future for all our children. Perhaps if he'd knocked together a desktop cold fusion reactor powered by supercharged, neutron-emitting guinea pigs suspended in deuterium gas he might have earned himslef an A".
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29th Aug 2005 10:58 am |
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10forcash
Member Since: 09 Jun 2005
Location: Ubique
Posts: 16534
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Simon, you obviously failed geography...
rich
Joined: 02 Jul 2005
Location: North Island, New Zealand
Unless Bush has annexed New Zealand over the weekend, I don't remember it being the 51st state.....
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29th Aug 2005 11:01 am |
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simon
Member Since: 11 Jan 2005
Location: Shropshire
Posts: 18296
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I think not 10 !
First post with the issue was in Florida thus the ref to the US !
rich has not had a problem - he managed to get his to re-charge OK.
So there !
-s
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29th Aug 2005 11:23 am |
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10forcash
Member Since: 09 Jun 2005
Location: Ubique
Posts: 16534
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simon wrote:I think not 10 !
First post with the issue was in Florida thus the ref to the US !
rich has not had a problem - he managed to get his to re-charge OK.
So there !
-s
Oooooohhh who's mr. Tetchy today
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29th Aug 2005 11:25 am |
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10forcash
Member Since: 09 Jun 2005
Location: Ubique
Posts: 16534
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The biggest problem with charging Batteries 'on vehicle' is the quality of voltage regulation of the charger, any standard battery charger with a max output of 8 Amps or less will not damage vehicle systems, the larger 'booster' sets can have voltages of 18V or higher. Jump starting a vehicle can also cause problems upon disconnection of the leads from the donor vehicle, alternator voltage regulators do net react quick enough to large changes in demand to maintain the 14.4V supply, the best way to prevent possible damage is to start the vehicle with the flat battery, then switch on high loads (lights, heated screens, heater fan - but not inductive loads) prior to removing the jump leads, then switching off the loads. typically, a Diesel engine battery will require up to an hour of alternator charging to recover to 80%. as a guide, it takes approximately seven miles of driving to replace the charge taken from the battery by starting the vehicle.
i have seen *lots* of problems associated with removing / disconnecting vehicle batteries for charging, provided you only use a low - output charger, no problems should be caused by charging whilst the battery is still connected. The advice / procedure in most vehicle manuals is there to cover situations where high output chargers may be used - which, by the way, can also cause damage to vehicle batteries
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29th Aug 2005 11:38 am |
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Gareth
Site Moderator
Member Since: 07 Dec 2004
Location: Bramhall
Posts: 26779
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When I flattened my battery playing around with the pre-cool function, I jump started with no problems.
This weekend, we have been at the chalet in Abersoch with the in-laws, and my father in laws Jaguar had a flat battery, we used the Disco to jump start it, again no problems encountered.
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30th Aug 2005 5:48 am |
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BN
Member Since: 18 Mar 2005
Location: Here
Posts: 6463
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Gareth wrote:When I flattened my battery playing around with the pre-cool function, I jump started with no problems.
This weekend, we have been at the chalet in Abersoch with the in-laws, and my father in laws Jaguar had a flat battery, we used the Disco to jump start it, again no problems encountered.
10's theory is correct and no doubt his practical experience, but many people do things and get away with it, like jump starting and even bump starting vehicles. It appears to be the luck of the draw whether you win or lose.
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30th Aug 2005 6:30 am |
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rich
Member Since: 02 Jul 2005
Location: North Island, New Zealand
Posts: 199
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Way back up the list... we dont have preheaters down here... I dont know if it is because we are backward or it is too hot... ha.. but thanks for the suggestion. Cheers from NZ Near enough 40 degrees South!!!
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30th Aug 2005 8:34 am |
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