Re: Equipment Batteries Just Don稚 Last
I took an electrical diagnosis course in 1978. The instructor told of th perplexing electrical problem of a car he was working on. Every so often it would show a momentary drain which would stop before they had a chance to trace it. They tried many things with no luck tracing the drain. Finally it dawned on them; the car was equipped with an electric clock, and every time the minute hand moved it would put a load on the battery.
Unless you disconnect the battery there is always a slight draw on the lead to the switch. Granted by itself that load is miniscule, but it's there.
rant/
Unfortunately, this is becoming more and more the norm. I'm just grabbing numbers out of the air, but I would guess that:
* forty years ago, when you turned off the ignition in any vehicle (except maybe a space shuttle [did it exist then]?), the battery had no draw on it.
* 20 years ago, some cars always tapped in for their daily allotment of electrons.
* 10 years ago, almost all passenger vehicles* and more & more "equipment" (forestry, mining, agricultural, etc) found nirvana in "always on" options.
* Today, even your cheap lawnmower needs to be plugged in or it reverts to its origins of nothing more than a pile of elemental...elements.
/rant
The above may be a slight dramatization - but mark my words, in 5 years (ok, maybe 10) that will be Truth.
*my 2009 Mercedes CLS 550 found itself on the bump stops when I left it for 4 or maybe 5 months one winter. It had a pneumatic suspension, so when the battery tired of holding position, it just no longer did so.
I took an electrical diagnosis course in 1978. The instructor told of th perplexing electrical problem of a car he was working on. Every so often it would show a momentary drain which would stop before they had a chance to trace it. They tried many things with no luck tracing the drain. Finally it dawned on them; the car was equipped with an electric clock, and every time the minute hand moved it would put a load on the battery.
Unless you disconnect the battery there is always a slight draw on the lead to the switch. Granted by itself that load is miniscule, but it's there.