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Date:         Wed, 19 Jun 2002 13:42:31 -0400
Reply-To:     jon.sykes@PS.GE.COM
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Jon Sykes <jon.sykes@PS.GE.COM>
Subject:      Alternator - Battery - jumpstart questions
Comments: To: limbolist@yahoogroups.com, vwdiesel@vwfans.com,
          Audi-VW-Diesels@yahoogroups.com
Content-Type: text/plain

I thought I had my charging system problem licked. My van wouldn't start one day last week. Turned out the alternator wasn't charging the battery so the battery went flat. Alternator was putting out current but it wasn't getting to the battery. Turns out there was a lose wire on the battery isolater (mine's a camper) so I guess the circuit was broken.

Anyway, I ran the van over the weekend and Monday morning. Monday lunchtime though though the van wouldn't start again. Turned the key and nothing happened. Got a jumpstart from a coworker and she started fine.

I have a couple of questions:

a. my battery is about 4 years old. the battery was working just fine until the lose wire - no problems starting even when the van sat, even in cold weather. however, now the battery has been drained so much could it have been pretty much worn out? can they be drained so much that the alternator isn't enough to get them back to normal?

b. a voltage test on the battery with engine running gave approx 12.5 V. I'm thinking it should be over 13 V. if the battery is almost flat but still has the alternator charging it, should I expect the voltage to be less than normal or should the current from the alternator as recorded at the battery be the same regardless of the battery's condition?

c. does the battery have to be removed from the van in order to charge it? this sounds like a big no no, but reason I ask is that one of my terminals is stuck and I can't remove it on my own. i don't want to spend $80 or more on a new battery until i know my battery is shot. i'd like to recharge my battery first and then see if it maintains a charge or not. in order to do this though i have to charge it in situ. could this do some damage to the electrical system, cause a fire, etc?

d. if all else fails, i'm out camping and the van won't start, can i jump it from the camper battery under my seat? hook up the jumper cables from that battery to the engine one? the camper battery is almost new. again though, could there be nasty consequences of doing this as they are both on the same circuit? i'm not really sure how the isolator works and whether altering the circuit from the camper battery to the engine battery while they are on the same circuit could damage something?

Any help much appeciated. I know it's a 10 year old Vanagon but I'd be a lot happier if I could be pretty certain that the van's going to start!

Thanks!

Jon


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