Hello there :hello:,
I'm pretty sure there are some electrical engineers/techs here and people who have an extensive knowledge about electrical hardware.
So my issue is pretty simple : a few days ago I had my "Houston we have problem - Main A bus undervolt" moment when my car didn't start. I'm pretty sure it's the battery as I have all the symptoms of such a problem : dim lights, slow electrical equipement... and not enough power to run the starter of course.
I do have a cheap battery tester : it showed me nothing the first day (the battery was too weak to make it work).
Then I had the idea to jury-rig a battery charger with an unused TV decoder power supply and some extra wire. After several hours I have some results : the battery tester tells me that the Volts were between 11.5V (low) and 12V (medium). Before going further here are the specs of my hardware :
With the "low-medium" Volts level I got, all "minor" electrical systems of the car seemed to work fine : interior lights were bright, I heard the fuel pump power itself correctly, the interior fan was a bit slow but working. But when I tried to start the starter sounded very underpowered, and wasn't even close to provide enough torque to start the engine. Also it could barely perform 2 revolutions.
I suspect I had some Volts but not enough Amps at all. If I'm right in this scenario (when you have a near-acceptable level of Volts but a low level of Amps), "small" systems can work well, but anything big (typically like the starter) will fail.
So a few questions :
- I dismounted the battery (man, those things are heavy, I guess that's all the lead into it !) and I'm now trying again to charge it inside my flat this time, which is much more convenient (and also potentially dangerous but well I can watch it and I put it right under the smoke detector) and more humidity/temperature controlled. Given the specs above, do I have any luck to reach an acceptable charge level with my home-made "battery charger" ? Is it only a matter of time or is my "charger" far to weak / inefficient ? It doesn't generates any noticeable heat, so I suspect it isn't working that much.
- The power supply has a built-in LED, which simply tells it is powered on. If I connect the outputs to the battery, the LED switches on, even with the AC input unplugged. What does that mean ? The device "pumps" on my battery ? But it does something, as I managed to rise the charge a bit.
- What kind of power level requires a small (european) car engine (1100 cc only) starter ?
- Maybe the battery is simply too old and can't hold a sufficient charge anymore. Any simple way that could validate/invalidate that hypothesis ? Sadly I have no multimeter.
Again, all I want is enough charge to start the engine. After that, I'll drive at high RPM on the beltway for a couple of hours (that's fuel-expensive and not very funny given the noise level inside the car but oh well) and the built-in alternator will do its job. The alternator failed 2 years ago and was replaced with a brand new (expensive) one, so it should be above any suspicion.
I'm pretty sure there are some electrical engineers/techs here and people who have an extensive knowledge about electrical hardware.
So my issue is pretty simple : a few days ago I had my "Houston we have problem - Main A bus undervolt" moment when my car didn't start. I'm pretty sure it's the battery as I have all the symptoms of such a problem : dim lights, slow electrical equipement... and not enough power to run the starter of course.
I do have a cheap battery tester : it showed me nothing the first day (the battery was too weak to make it work).
Then I had the idea to jury-rig a battery charger with an unused TV decoder power supply and some extra wire. After several hours I have some results : the battery tester tells me that the Volts were between 11.5V (low) and 12V (medium). Before going further here are the specs of my hardware :
Battery : Leaded, 12 DC Volts (nominal, max 14.4V), 420 Amps, max output 44 Amps/hour, Maximum install date : 2010 (that's a bit old, no ?), made in Ukraine.
Power Supply : 220 AC Volts to 12 DC Volts, output 3.5 Amps/hour.
With the "low-medium" Volts level I got, all "minor" electrical systems of the car seemed to work fine : interior lights were bright, I heard the fuel pump power itself correctly, the interior fan was a bit slow but working. But when I tried to start the starter sounded very underpowered, and wasn't even close to provide enough torque to start the engine. Also it could barely perform 2 revolutions.
I suspect I had some Volts but not enough Amps at all. If I'm right in this scenario (when you have a near-acceptable level of Volts but a low level of Amps), "small" systems can work well, but anything big (typically like the starter) will fail.
So a few questions :
- I dismounted the battery (man, those things are heavy, I guess that's all the lead into it !) and I'm now trying again to charge it inside my flat this time, which is much more convenient (and also potentially dangerous but well I can watch it and I put it right under the smoke detector) and more humidity/temperature controlled. Given the specs above, do I have any luck to reach an acceptable charge level with my home-made "battery charger" ? Is it only a matter of time or is my "charger" far to weak / inefficient ? It doesn't generates any noticeable heat, so I suspect it isn't working that much.
- The power supply has a built-in LED, which simply tells it is powered on. If I connect the outputs to the battery, the LED switches on, even with the AC input unplugged. What does that mean ? The device "pumps" on my battery ? But it does something, as I managed to rise the charge a bit.
- What kind of power level requires a small (european) car engine (1100 cc only) starter ?
- Maybe the battery is simply too old and can't hold a sufficient charge anymore. Any simple way that could validate/invalidate that hypothesis ? Sadly I have no multimeter.
Again, all I want is enough charge to start the engine. After that, I'll drive at high RPM on the beltway for a couple of hours (that's fuel-expensive and not very funny given the noise level inside the car but oh well) and the built-in alternator will do its job. The alternator failed 2 years ago and was replaced with a brand new (expensive) one, so it should be above any suspicion.