M
Mike M
Guest
Yesterday, my 1994 Buick Regal had no power except for a faint glow of light coming from the hood after I lifted it up. I figured the problem might have been the alternator, since I have a brand new battery, and no one seemed to doubt that when I asked about the possibility on these forums. I called up AAA, and the driver said that the likely problem was a loose negative terminal on the battery that he simply tightened for me. He checked the alternator, and said that it was fine and putting out 14 volts. After he jump started the car, I drove 3 miles to Autozone and was able to start the car twice (once to test it, once more to drive to the front so the shop could measure the voltage of the battery.
The machine said the charge was very low, but couldn't determine if the battery was good or bad. I needed another jump start, then drove for 10 miles this time, came back, and the machine now read that the battery was good but had a slightly low charge. If the negative terminal was loose, is it even possible that the battery would fully discharge? When the guy from AAA put a clamp on the alternator, did the 14 volts he read indicate that it was functioning properly, or like my friend said, only indicate that the battery has a possible maximum charge of 14 volts? I don't want to go through batteries every 3 weeks if there's an underlying problem. I just changed the battery last month after the one that came with the used car died on me. At the time though, I thought that the low quality battery simply couldn't handle the cold Philly weather coupled with the fact that I hadn't driven it for 8 days.
The machine said the charge was very low, but couldn't determine if the battery was good or bad. I needed another jump start, then drove for 10 miles this time, came back, and the machine now read that the battery was good but had a slightly low charge. If the negative terminal was loose, is it even possible that the battery would fully discharge? When the guy from AAA put a clamp on the alternator, did the 14 volts he read indicate that it was functioning properly, or like my friend said, only indicate that the battery has a possible maximum charge of 14 volts? I don't want to go through batteries every 3 weeks if there's an underlying problem. I just changed the battery last month after the one that came with the used car died on me. At the time though, I thought that the low quality battery simply couldn't handle the cold Philly weather coupled with the fact that I hadn't driven it for 8 days.