Hi!
Did more work on the audio system with the car in the garage the past couple days.
Really just building the sub box to fit in the storage compartment, where the third row of seats would have been in my wagon.
I went to pull it out of the garage this morning so I could sweep up. I lifted the hood, tightened the positive lead back onto the battery (I undid the positive, because I expected to hook up the amplifier and didn't want to shock myself), closed the hood, went inside, turned the key. Dash lights came on, but the starter did not crank, and no noise from the fuel pump (I know what to listen for now).
I went back and checked that my power line for the amp wasn't shorting anywhere. It wasn't; I've been careful about that. (it's not connected, so theoretically it could touch something-- but it's a stiff cable and I've had it bent up out of the way. Been driving for a week with it installed, so plenty of time for it to show a major short if there was a nick somewhere).
Got back into the front seat.
Turned the key just one more time. There was a brief buzzing sound, a warning buzzer? Like the sound your drier makes when it's done with your clothes. This time, no dash lights. Turned the key backwards. Clock comes on. If I try to turn on the headlights, or force the interior lights on by turning the headlight knob to the left, they don't come on but the clock cuts out.
I'm terribly embarrassed to confess that I don't have a voltmeter, but, this sounds very much like a dead battery? Just enough power for the clock, or maybe a single interior light bulb but not all of them at the same time?
I'm thinking I might run out and get a voltmeter. Handy to have in any case!
I haven't tried jump starting the car, just yet. I'm worried: WHY is the battery dead?
For the past two days, the positive lead has been completely disconnected. I've really just been building my sub box. The only wiring I did, was to solder some wires to the OEM amplifier by the spare tire, to pull out the old amplifier and bypass it. But I haven't, yet, actually hooked up my new amplifier or the stereo. All these wires are just hanging loose.
The battery tested at 12.53 volts and 576 amps mid last week (when I thought I had a battery problem, and it was just the fuel ignition switch )
Do batteries die all of a sudden?
Or, about the same time, I also replaced the starter motor and starter solenoid (new starter sounds much better than the original), possible that the new solenoid suddenly died? I drove it for a couple days just fine.
Before I hook up the jump start, do I have some major short somewhere?? What was the buzzer warning about-- just a low battery, or something else?
Finally, I'll mention that before I pulled into the garage, I disconnected the factory amp, AND I wanted to get a sense for how good my connections would have to be by deliberately shorting the power lead for my new amp against the chassis. At only 12 volts, it wouldn't even conduct through a thin layer of paint; a direct connection to a bit of bare metal on the chassis produced a spark. Satisfied, I bent it out of the way again. Then I started the car and drove it into the garage.
I guess the point I'm making there, is that with only 12 volts, any short would have to be copper against copper, not two bare wires even 1/8" apart. The likelihood that my amp power cable directly touched my amp ground cable, or any other cable (speaker, ai net, etc.) is very slim indeed.
But I can't think of anything, that I've changed in the past couple days. Just building the carpeted box for the subwoofer and amplifier, and installed the speaker cables that connected to the old amplifier output harness, but aren't connected to the new amplifier on the other end yet.
Do batteries, just die without warning at only 3 years of age, and it's purely coincidence?
Did more work on the audio system with the car in the garage the past couple days.
Really just building the sub box to fit in the storage compartment, where the third row of seats would have been in my wagon.
I went to pull it out of the garage this morning so I could sweep up. I lifted the hood, tightened the positive lead back onto the battery (I undid the positive, because I expected to hook up the amplifier and didn't want to shock myself), closed the hood, went inside, turned the key. Dash lights came on, but the starter did not crank, and no noise from the fuel pump (I know what to listen for now).
I went back and checked that my power line for the amp wasn't shorting anywhere. It wasn't; I've been careful about that. (it's not connected, so theoretically it could touch something-- but it's a stiff cable and I've had it bent up out of the way. Been driving for a week with it installed, so plenty of time for it to show a major short if there was a nick somewhere).
Got back into the front seat.
Turned the key just one more time. There was a brief buzzing sound, a warning buzzer? Like the sound your drier makes when it's done with your clothes. This time, no dash lights. Turned the key backwards. Clock comes on. If I try to turn on the headlights, or force the interior lights on by turning the headlight knob to the left, they don't come on but the clock cuts out.
I'm terribly embarrassed to confess that I don't have a voltmeter, but, this sounds very much like a dead battery? Just enough power for the clock, or maybe a single interior light bulb but not all of them at the same time?
I'm thinking I might run out and get a voltmeter. Handy to have in any case!
I haven't tried jump starting the car, just yet. I'm worried: WHY is the battery dead?
For the past two days, the positive lead has been completely disconnected. I've really just been building my sub box. The only wiring I did, was to solder some wires to the OEM amplifier by the spare tire, to pull out the old amplifier and bypass it. But I haven't, yet, actually hooked up my new amplifier or the stereo. All these wires are just hanging loose.
The battery tested at 12.53 volts and 576 amps mid last week (when I thought I had a battery problem, and it was just the fuel ignition switch )
Do batteries die all of a sudden?
Or, about the same time, I also replaced the starter motor and starter solenoid (new starter sounds much better than the original), possible that the new solenoid suddenly died? I drove it for a couple days just fine.
Before I hook up the jump start, do I have some major short somewhere?? What was the buzzer warning about-- just a low battery, or something else?
Finally, I'll mention that before I pulled into the garage, I disconnected the factory amp, AND I wanted to get a sense for how good my connections would have to be by deliberately shorting the power lead for my new amp against the chassis. At only 12 volts, it wouldn't even conduct through a thin layer of paint; a direct connection to a bit of bare metal on the chassis produced a spark. Satisfied, I bent it out of the way again. Then I started the car and drove it into the garage.
I guess the point I'm making there, is that with only 12 volts, any short would have to be copper against copper, not two bare wires even 1/8" apart. The likelihood that my amp power cable directly touched my amp ground cable, or any other cable (speaker, ai net, etc.) is very slim indeed.
But I can't think of anything, that I've changed in the past couple days. Just building the carpeted box for the subwoofer and amplifier, and installed the speaker cables that connected to the old amplifier output harness, but aren't connected to the new amplifier on the other end yet.
Do batteries, just die without warning at only 3 years of age, and it's purely coincidence?
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