you either have a dead cell in battery or excessive current draw/charge your battery and then have it tested at local parts store/if battery is ok you can check for a draw by disconnecting neg battery cable and touching it to battery post to see if it gets a good spark (a little spark is ok because radio and computer memory require small amount of current)if there is a spark you have draw on battery
2006-09-10 17:59:15
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answer #1
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answered by Kentuckygearhead 3
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I had this a pair of years in the past. there is a few thing this is draining the battery whilst the vehicle is parked. In my vehicle it replaced into the computerized radio antenna force, although I first suspected the alarm. yet another hazard replaced into the important door locks. Get the vehicle in an rather quiet spot and pay attention for any sounds it ought to be making whilst a charged battery is related. although some human beings could propose a gentle final on in a glovebox or bags compartment, those hardly use sufficient cutting-edge to have plenty result, in spite of the incontrovertible fact that this is quite worth finding only the comparable. connect a voltmeter around the battery or an ammeter stable for say 20 amps between a battery terminal and the disconnected detrimental lead. in case you haven't any longer have been given an ammeter the present drain may well be sufficient to gentle a low-watt 12 V bulb. Pull fuses until eventually the present stops or the voltage rises somewhat. then you definately be responsive to the place the situation could lie.
2016-12-15 05:54:14
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answer #2
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answered by ? 3
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Charge and load test the battery, if the battery is good then you have a parasitic draw in the system or there is something left on. Being a Chevy truck I would suggest dome light, cargo light, or underhood light.
2006-09-10 18:10:13
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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first recharge it discont the cables and try it again after 2 days if its dead the batterys no good but if it works then u have a draw to find the draw hook up a amp meter and disconnect 1 fuse at a time till the draw is found the find out what circuit is doing it and repair it
2006-09-10 18:51:19
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Take the battery back to where you bought it and get an exchange. If the batter dies again check alternator it may not be generating enough electricity to charge the battery.
2006-09-10 17:59:01
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answer #5
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answered by Teacher 6
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you have either got a bad battery or something is pulling the juice back out of it,,id have the battery checked first,,and then the alternator,it may be drawing the juice out of it,,also look for something that might be staying on,,like a light or something,,if all this fails,,take it and have a draw test done on it,,this will find what ever is doing ,,really fast,,,good luck with it,,i hope this help,s.
2006-09-10 18:01:04
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answer #6
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answered by dodge man 7
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Check the connection cables. Depending on the type of battery, some places where you buy a battery from will look at it for you for free, for example, Les Schwab, Wal-Mart, etc...
2006-09-10 18:11:22
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answer #7
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answered by BethSmith 2
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chances are the battery was sitting on a shelf somewhere doing nothing before it was put in your truck and the cells in the battery went flat
2006-09-10 18:02:51
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answer #8
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answered by Paul G 5
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A battery that loses its charge is usually bad.
If you charge it AND DISCONNECT THE POSITIVE CABLE, then see if it loses its charge.
If it does, you know it's the battery.
If it doesn't, you have an electrical gremlin you have to find.
2006-09-10 18:35:43
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answer #9
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answered by s2scrm 5
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if it is the type you can unscrew each cell top up with distiled water and put it on charge again
2006-09-10 18:00:19
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answer #10
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answered by kjcf63 2
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