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What could be so strong to turn back on and destroy a battery that fast? Car has killed batteries like this for last 5 years. 1997 Chrysler Sebring Convertible. No alarm system.

2007-11-25 00:14:15 · 8 answers · asked by Debi 1 in Cars & Transportation Car Makes Chrysler

8 answers

i am not sure what he did to put it into sleep mode. i have never heard of that. the only thing i can think of is he removed the ignition off draw fuse. this would remove power from the radio, door locks, etc. you need to take it to a dealer or competent mechanic to find your battery draw. a dealer would be preferred because they know your car better and have more accurate service information

2007-11-25 00:43:37 · answer #1 · answered by sprinkles 6 · 0 1

I guess this (Sleep Mode) was to kill off a draw. A small drain kills batterys faster than a strong drain. Lead Acid batterys like large loads and quick recharge. The location of the sebring battery in the front fender means it never sees regular servicing and everytime the battery is a problem it should be replaced every 3 years or so. A trunk light bulb staying on can do just what you describe. Parisitic draws should be less than 50 Miliamps measured across the battery and ground wire with the ground disconnected. When in doubt and the battery is over 24 months old replace it.

2007-11-25 00:22:44 · answer #2 · answered by John Paul 7 · 0 0

Packet typhoon? I as quickly as had a low-cost NIC that grew to become into broadcasting around the community and slowing each little thing down. I additionally as quickly as plugged the two ends of a community cable right into a change and led to a catastrophic loop returned which delivered a LAN to its knees. So packet storms could nicely be a controversy. extra high priced Switches can stumble on them and close down the port. So the two you have the two ends of one million cable plugged in, OR your suspect workstation is braodcasting like mad while that's assume to be asleep. At my save.. I definitely have 8-10 comparable computers, so swapping areas is reasonably ordinary. NICs unfortuantely are frequently geared up into the board. counting on your IT budget.. in keeping with possibility purchase a $20 card. pass into BIOS and disable the onboard NIC and then use the PCI community card you purchased as a attempt. it does not be a bad element on your corporation to have a minimum of one million spare community card lieing around for in simple terms that kind of element. yet until now i might do this... i might in simple terms substitute ports with yet another workstation, seeing if the problem accompanied the suspect workstation or no remember if that's a bad port. Wake on LAN should not be the problem, on account that's a passive protocol. except some thing on the community is sending out WOL packets (referred to as magic packets) - i won't be able to work out how this may be a controversy. i think a bad port or a bad NIC. counting on how your computers are set up and which OS you're working. that's beneficial to follow a picture from yet another workstation to this one. Wiping out all the information interior the approach, yet in addition removing a doubtlessly corrupted OS. In abode windows 7 you are able to photograph from interior abode windows. If utilising Vista, use a loose utilty like PING or a 30 day path of Acronis. If XP, i does not propose making use of a picture except the hardware is same.

2016-10-09 10:56:21 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

When I had a similar problem, I found out that I had a bad battery cable. It had a bad spot in the cover of the cable that was hitting against the frame of the motor, You might try following both cables to see if you have a bad spot, if found replace the cable.

2007-11-26 15:02:57 · answer #4 · answered by Tom Thumb 3 · 0 0

the only thing that he could have done to put it in sleep mode would have been to pull the main fuse which would have knocked out several of its functions,and if that didn't work then you have a serious draw on the vehicle,any good mechanic should be able to find this it doesn't take a rocket scientist to find a dead draw in a vehicle it takes a lot of patience though,id have another shop look this one over,any good repair shop should be able to find this,good luck on it.

2007-11-27 16:58:53 · answer #5 · answered by dodge man 7 · 0 0

I WOULD RECOMMEND THAT YOU GET YOUR VEHICLES COMPUTER SCANNED TO FIND OUT JUST WHAT THE PROBLEM IS FIRST SO THEN YOU WILL HAVE SOME IDEA WHAT IS WRONG AS WELL AS WHAT TO EXPECT.

TRY FINDING AN INDEPENDENT AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR SHOP INSTEAD OF THE DEALER OR ANY CHAIN STORE BECAUSE YOU WILL BE OVERALL MORE PLEASED WITH THE PERSONAL SERVICE THAT YOU WILL RECEIVE.

2007-11-26 04:39:10 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

I don't know about your car but Chrysler used to have voltage regulators that would do this when they went bad.

2007-11-25 00:18:24 · answer #7 · answered by 19G30 5 · 0 2

What on earth is "sleep mode"?

2007-11-25 19:00:51 · answer #8 · answered by Firebird 7 · 0 0

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