Date: Thu, 24 Jul 1997 13:17:33 EDT
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@vanagon.com>
From: Jim Thompson <uvx196@JUNO.COM>
Subject: Re: Battery and Battery compartment
Stephen -
You don't mention the year of your Westy, but it sounds like a Vanagon
version. Since the main owners manual does not address the fact of the
optional swivel seat on the Westy submodel, I have found that if you move
the seat entirely forward, then rotate it 180 degrees (front facing the
rear), you have excellent access to the battery.
This is not a DPO Conversion - this is factory on ALL Vanagons, except
Diesels, where the battery is in the engine compartment. Not the
greatest place, mind you, but it is factory. I like it there because I
can tap off of it directly for other electrical accessories that I use on
the dash and throughout the camper. Later model Vanagon Westy's have an
auxilary battery beneath the driver's seat as well.
There is no such thing as a true sealed maintenance-free battery. All
automotive batteries require some H2o maintenance (distilled water
preferred). Even on so-called sealed batteries, the covers can be
removed with a screwdriver to access the cells to top off. Water level
max on most batteries is just a little over the tops of the visible
plates in each cell (use a flashlight). Each cell's water should be
clear - cloudy ones indicate the plates are sulphating and the battery
life is on the wane. A battery hydrometer can tell you the state of
charge and condition in each cell - they're cheap from any FLAPS. During
the hot weather of summer, you should check your battery at least once a
month. Check the archives for heavier duty deep-cycle batteries. They
cost 2 to 3 times more than the standard automotive battery, but are
worth it if you are using a lot of 12V accessories both on the road and
at the campsite.
The Bentley Factory Manual (VV91) shows some general, but good tips on
battery maintenance. Don't have a Bentley? Take my advice as an owner
and not as a person who sells parts and manuals: Spend the bucks and get
one anyway - there's a lot of great factory info to learn from this book.
Buy it from me, buy it from Ron, buy it from your FLAPS or buy it at a
local flea market (I did) - Just get one.
Jim
84 Westy 2.1
62 Beetle (Father was original owner)
90 Fox Wagon
Sherwood Automotive * The Old Volks Home (oldvolkshome1@juno.com) (916)
221-5342
On Thu, 24 Jul 1997 08:38:51 -0600 Stephen Jones <sjones@TETONDATA.COM>
writes:
>While exploring my new Westy, I stumbled upon the primary battery
>compartment. Could this be in a more inconvienient to get to?
>Am I missing sonething?
>
>The owners manual says to push the passengers seat all the way
>forward to access. Even all the way forward I can't access the front
>screws on the plate that covers the battery. Swiveling the seat 45
>degrees allows access to these screws, but I don't see how it would be
>possible to remove the battery if need be (Without removing the
>entire seat). The manual implies that there is a storage compartment
>under the seat with bolts to remove the seat, but I can locate no
>storage compartment.
>
>Under the drivers seat is a nice hinged panel to acces the second
>battery compartment. Is the passengers side a DPO conversion?
>
>Any tips on battery access would be appreciated.
>
>If you needed to jump start the vehicle, where would you ground
>the negative terminal to? (I'm used to grounding it on the engine)
>
>The battery also requires some maintenace (add water, etc?). I have
>never owned a battery like that, nor do I have a manual. How do I
>check
>the water level? How much to add? Is tap water OK? Can I replace
>this battery with a maintenace free battery? Any reccomenendations?
>
>Thanks
>Stephen Jones
>
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