Lunentucker
Well-Known Member
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- #31
More on whether or not you'll begin to see signs.
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I don't think your NC summers or mine in VA are conducive to using the current lithium technology.I guess I should play the lottery. I must have good luck. My 2020 will be 4 years the end of august with the original batteries. I should also be looking at replacement. Does anybody recommend paying the xtra cash for brands like optima etc. I tried lithium in my Road King and lasted one year and it gave out and swelled so much it looked ready to pop. Thanks for any recommendations.
The only downside would be if you're still under warranty and have an electrical or electronics issue, and the dealership sees what you did. You can bet that they'll try to exploit it to deny a claim.so really, is there any reason not to do this? Seems like a preventative no brainer.
Removing the F42 fuse does not deactivate the ESS system, it just prevents the system from separating the batteries from each other.The ESS system is easily deactivated with the removal of the F42 fuse. No further programming or tricks are needed. If I press the dash button the light on the button comes on. That's it. It's already off.
I couldn't get mine to come on yesterday, despite repeated attempts with engine fully warmed up, city like stops, and no AC. Maybe it will later, but it sure acts like it's gone.Removing the F42 fuse does not deactivate the ESS system, it just prevents the system from separating the batteries from each other.
For those waiting for the aux battery to go bad before disconnecting it, why? Disconnect it while it's still good and use it as an emergency backup in case the main battery goes dead.
F42 supplies power to the relay that separates the batteries during an ESS event, isolating the aux battery to power the interior electronics and leaving the main battery to power the restart. With the fuse removed, the batteries stay connected during an ESS event with both batteries powering the interior electronics and the restart. What removing the fuse does is allow you to disconnect the aux battery and run only with the main battery without causing any errors.I couldn't get mine to come on yesterday, despite repeated attempts with engine fully warmed up, city like stops, and no AC. Maybe it will later, but it sure acts like it's gone.
Again, in dozens of posts all over the place - it doesn't matter.How long can we expect the auxiliary battery to last before it fails. I have the start/stop disabled using a tazer so I’m hoping the aux battery last longer.
Aux battery isn't that bad to get to through the wheel well. There's youtube videos out there showing that you don't even need to take things as far apart as some do.OK this is a rant but honestly two years of life for a battery that is essentially inaccessible is ridiculous. And the fact that you don't know when it is failing makes it all the worst.
Yes- this ^^^^^If you pay attention to your truck, you will know when it's having an issue with either of the batteries. The truck does a test every fresh start. It then will exhibit signs or warnings of a battery issue, such as ESS never engaging saying 'not ready - battery charging' or showing warnings about AUX switches not being available due to battery levels. Problem is most people are just ignoring these things and then act surprised when it finally gives out.
Totally agree though that the lifespan of the original batteries is crap. But if you get a good battery in there, the system works just fine.
What generally happens is that because they are tied together in parallel - both have actually gone bad, average lifespan and all. People say one ruined the other, but unless one shorts, it's not likely. I've enough time in electronics to be able to say - if one goes replace both because it's been through the exact same charging and discharge cycles, the same voltages charging (or not charging due to lack of long drives) and so on.I waited long enough to replace the pony battery the main battery was damaged. Still no indication of a problem from the system diagnostics.
Diagnostics don't do the job when the big battery camouflages the failing pony battery. Wish that they did, but provably they don't.
Along with Jerry's posts and some others...........This should be made a Sticky!
That simply keeps the system from doing a startup battery check on the aux battery. ESS will still function for about half a dozen cycles before it stops working because the system decides something is wrong.The ESS system is easily deactivated with the removal of the F42 fuse.
What's easier than pulling 1 fuse and pulling one end of one cable loose? Does the same thing because the PCR is staying closed keeping the main battery connected to N1.Easier method.
Simply remove the aux and run the ground to chassis ground. the + undo the tape and loom so it reaches to the + lead on the main battery. I installed a odyssey slightly larger 96r on my diesel in place of the standard battery.
My voltage rarely drops below 14v now even with a large stereo. My ESS works as intended if wanted.
I got about 2-1/2 years out of mine, then started getting odd messages about Aux switches being out of service at start up. Replaced both batteries all us well Now. I have the Auto-Stop/Start disabled so it doesn’t drain the setup. By the time I hit 3 years in October I’ll probably have 52-53,000 miles So it does get driven.My original batteries only lasted about a year and 3 months.