Napalm
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- June 18, 2015
- Messages
- 763
- Reaction score
- 33
- City, State
- Memphis tn
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 2016
We have a 2016 Explorer XLT with the 3.5 TiVCT engine. It has, get this, 35700 miles on it as of this morning.
Now it's been trouble free since June of 15 when we bought it. and yes - that's right significant driving over 18K in the first year. So just got back from a trip up north to St Louis. car seems fine - needs new tires - different rant for another thread.
But tuesday afternoon wife calls in a panic because it won't start and just clicks. it seems she got some gas (but didn't fill it up for some reason) and then went to start. lights/screens on, and warning for stability assistance off - clicking noises no start. she then proceeds to do it a few more times before calling me apparently. when my first thought is weak battery issue - some glitch up etc. Get the jumper cables thinking it might need a light jump. she calls before I get there - well it finally started. She kept trying even though I told her not to and started it anyway. I have no idea what it did.
Next morning - wednesday - well the beeps sound funny. She's thinking the beeps for the part assist sound different. I discount this for a number of reasons namely because it's played over the stereo speakers which she had on while she was calling me over BT anyway. But - Real issue - it hard started that afternoon after sitting still outside for about 6 hours.
This morning - in the garage - similar issue hard started. no clicking no chimes. no warnings on the screen just a slower than normal crank over.
Is it my imagination or are the batteries in the 2016's smaller and weaker than normal? I find it odd that it's rating says 500CCA and group 65 but so far every other group 65 I look at is 700+ and I swear they look thicker.
Anyway other than putting in a new battery does anyone have any other potential issues I might have missed. OH I did do my normal multi-meter test - DC Volts at the terminals, then at the cable ends. And then start the car and do DC Volts again and then flip to AC volts to make sure it's not getting AC current out of the alternator. I don't have a deep load tester.
Now it's been trouble free since June of 15 when we bought it. and yes - that's right significant driving over 18K in the first year. So just got back from a trip up north to St Louis. car seems fine - needs new tires - different rant for another thread.
But tuesday afternoon wife calls in a panic because it won't start and just clicks. it seems she got some gas (but didn't fill it up for some reason) and then went to start. lights/screens on, and warning for stability assistance off - clicking noises no start. she then proceeds to do it a few more times before calling me apparently. when my first thought is weak battery issue - some glitch up etc. Get the jumper cables thinking it might need a light jump. she calls before I get there - well it finally started. She kept trying even though I told her not to and started it anyway. I have no idea what it did.
Next morning - wednesday - well the beeps sound funny. She's thinking the beeps for the part assist sound different. I discount this for a number of reasons namely because it's played over the stereo speakers which she had on while she was calling me over BT anyway. But - Real issue - it hard started that afternoon after sitting still outside for about 6 hours.
This morning - in the garage - similar issue hard started. no clicking no chimes. no warnings on the screen just a slower than normal crank over.
Is it my imagination or are the batteries in the 2016's smaller and weaker than normal? I find it odd that it's rating says 500CCA and group 65 but so far every other group 65 I look at is 700+ and I swear they look thicker.
Anyway other than putting in a new battery does anyone have any other potential issues I might have missed. OH I did do my normal multi-meter test - DC Volts at the terminals, then at the cable ends. And then start the car and do DC Volts again and then flip to AC volts to make sure it's not getting AC current out of the alternator. I don't have a deep load tester.