Re: Battery going dead
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Home away from home
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Disconnect the cables and see if it still goes dead. If so, it is definately a bad battery. If not, there must be a draw on the system.
HTH, John
Posted on: 2008/11/1 21:54
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Re: Battery going dead
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Home away from home
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Did u have the same problem with the OLD battery???
Posted on: 2008/11/1 21:55
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VAPOR LOCK demystified: See paragraph SEVEN of PMCC documentaion as listed in post #11 of the following thread:f
packardinfo.com/xoops/html/modules/newbb/viewtopic.php?topic_id=7245 |
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Re: Battery going dead
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Forum Ambassador
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Unless you have a defective battery, there has to be a current drain somewhere.
Not knowing if your car has one, a common place for a slow drain in later cars is the trunk light. If you have no trunk light, then any small light staying on will draw in the 2-300 mA range and can drain the battery over a week or two. If the mechanic didn't check with a meter capable of reading down to milliamps, he would never see that small a drain with regular garage equipment. A suggestion would be to get a Volt-Ohm meter capable of reading 5-10 amps. Pull a battery cable and place the meter in series. Just be sure nothing is knowingly on when you connect because any large load (headlights, radio, etc) will damage the meter.
Posted on: 2008/11/1 22:07
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Re: Battery going dead
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Forum Ambassador
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The little ball in the trunk light switch was stuck in the ON position and when ever I would forget to disconnect the battery, it would drain it in a few days. I removed the positive cable (hot) and watched closely as I reconnected it. It drew a small spark letting me know that something was drawing current. Because of hydrogen in that area, it is generally not a good practice. I won't tell you how long it took me to peek into the trunk
Posted on: 2008/11/1 22:14
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Re: Battery going dead
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Forum Ambassador
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Quote:
Pierre wrote: For some reason my new battery on my 38 Super Eight seems to go dead after a couple of weeks....... Pierre, to Packardinfo. Can't help with battery draining problem, but could you please include your '38 Super Eight in the Owner Registry together with a pic, and any known history? Again,
Posted on: 2008/11/2 1:42
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Mal
/o[]o\ ==== Bowral, Southern Highlands of NSW, Australia "Out of chaos comes order" - Nietzsche. 1938 Eight Touring Sedan - SOLD 1941 One-Twenty Club Coupe - SOLD 1948 Super Eight Limo, chassis RHD - SOLD 1950 Eight Touring Sedan - SOLD What's this? Put your Packard in the Packard Vehicle Registry! Here's how! Any questions - PM or email me at ozstatman@gmail.com |
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Re: Battery going dead
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Just popping in
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I did have the same problem with the old battery. This one is new. If the key is left in the ignition that seems to have something to do with it maybe.
Posted on: 2008/11/2 9:06
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Re: Battery going dead
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Forum Ambassador
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As long as in off position, just leaving the key in iqnition should have no effect unless something really strange is going on with your switch. I think you are going to have to monitor with a low reading instrument and disconnect a bit at a time until drain stops and then see what in that circuit is amiss. Any hidden lights or signs of corrosion across two adjacent terminals on something? Another remote possibility would be the brake light switch. If the switch had an internal leak, it may still work but there would be a high resistance current drain through the fluid since the voltage is present on one terminal all the time.
Posted on: 2008/11/2 11:12
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Re: Battery going dead
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Forum Ambassador
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Another possibiity, though remote, if your car has the same setup as the 36 and back senior cars; the brake light is activated whenever the tranmission is put in park. So if you have the same transmission switch for the brake lights and you're parking with the trans in reverse and the battery connected, the battery will be dead within a few hours.
Posted on: 2008/11/2 12:06
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Re: Battery going dead
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Home away from home
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If your car is like the later cars and has a clock. The drain would be intermittent only causing a draw when the clock is being wound. Therefore, it would be easy to miss. If this happens to be correct it is naturally easy to fix. Just take out the clock fuse. Hope this helps.
Posted on: 2008/11/2 15:37
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North Hills Packards
2 - 1949 Super Convertibles 1949 Club Sedan 1947 Custom Sedan Completed a book on the 22nd & 23rd series cars |
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