Blade1668
Well-Known Member
I respect your personal choice. ?
I mean, one would think the starter and other components were engineered to maintain a specific duty cycle. But, logic should follow that the life will be extended by lowering the number of cycles. This will not always ring true, but based on averages it should.
I have read about Aux battery failures, and speculation that it may have been caused by not using ESS. I don’t really buy it though.
Battery technology is not that complicated. If a battery is marginal, and the system stops charging it correctly, it will likely lead to an early demise. In the case of our Jeeps, there is some additional complexity due to the way the vehicle senses voltage and adapts charging accordingly. Then you have dealer service techs who don’t understand the system, or how to troubleshoot it. It’s like a doctor diagnosing cancer without knowing how to determine the cause.
I am not sure I would make the jump to say ESS is causing engine failures. It would seem that it is just a variable, and that the failure would have happened anyway. Also, just because something is part of the symptom, doesn’t mean it is part of the root cause. There are a lot of variables that would need to be examined.
If we look at it with anecdotal evidence we can draw bad conclusions. My first engine failure ever, in a low mileage scenario, was also my first vehicle that had an ESS system. Anecdotally, ESS leads to premature engine failure. This is the problem with anecdotal evidence.
I work with a lot of engineers, yes some of them lack common sense, but most of them are capable of troubleshooting what they understand.
My wild ass assumption on engine problems was on the cam shaft lob failure being possible due to intermittent oil less starts. I've seen some abused, high mileage / hours engines with less wear than has been seen with the 3.6s that have failed. It could be a factor in the problem not the root reason. Higher temperatures added with thinner oil engine starting then stop, start, stop, each time oil pressure drops off then needs to re pressurized and be forced to bearings surfaces. I've seen firearms to include machine guns have wear on surfaces, galling and failure due to lack of lubrication in the past. In that area it was due to jackasses listening to other jackasses telling them to use substandard lubrication or none at all so dirt, dust and sand wouldn't stick plus easier to clean. I know my example isn't the same but lack of lubrication is the same"???". A engine is cycling a lot more than any normal machinegun does in just one hour of operation let alone 3000 miles.
My comment on engineers is a wide brush stroke some is tongue in cheek but I've met quite a few that are idiots that lack of "uncommon" sense.
On the ESS battery failures I think it's been hashed out quite well and probably due to combination of things. Lack of being fully charged, recharged, bad batch of them, under charging, ect ect.
I've been lucky on the battery problem but I have been proactive with my JT charging system and have a solar system charging the batteries too. On my few stops at dealership for anything I even informed service department that I would probably need to point out the additional complexity to it.
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