2002 F250 7.3 auto 121k miles, edge evolution, 4" exhaust, AIS intake
A little history, bought truck almost a year ago in the middle of winter. Came with one new napa battery and a motorcraft (I'm assuming the original). Truck only gets driven on weekends, if that. If it got drove weekly it started fine. Truck happened to sit 3 weeks in fairly cold MN temps, single digits...wouldn't start. Found out the new napa battery was froze. Got a new for free since it was still under warrently and when I threw the motocraft out of the truck it cracked when it hit the ground (little frustration was involved)...good excuse to buy new batteries. Not wanting to mess around with junk I bought two new Diehard Platnums. Started fine the rest of the winter on them but I can't recall if it ever sat for 3 weeks. Started fine all summer.
Fastforward to today:
Truck has been sitting not being started in 2 or 3 weeks, week ago we had 40 degree temps few days ago it was in the single digits. Try to start truck and it just clicks. Notice frost on the passenger side battery (guessing its froze), pull it out and put the newer NAPA battery from the first paragraph in. Truck starts. Let it run a bit, shut it off, unhook the napa battery and leave the diehard hooked up on the driver side and try to start truck, it only clicks so alteast it had power and not froze also. I couldn't hear water in either diehard battery so either they are both froze/almost froze or there is no room for the water to slosh around in diehard platnums?
Last year I tried a test where I unhooked one battery completly, put a meter set to miliamps between the NEG battery post and the NEG battery cable on the battery thats still hooked up and watched what happened. The number seemed high at first but after 30 or so seconds would drop, then 50 seconds drop again. At which point it would be at a number close to what other vehicles I was trying the same test on would be.
Open to suggestions. Thanks.
A little history, bought truck almost a year ago in the middle of winter. Came with one new napa battery and a motorcraft (I'm assuming the original). Truck only gets driven on weekends, if that. If it got drove weekly it started fine. Truck happened to sit 3 weeks in fairly cold MN temps, single digits...wouldn't start. Found out the new napa battery was froze. Got a new for free since it was still under warrently and when I threw the motocraft out of the truck it cracked when it hit the ground (little frustration was involved)...good excuse to buy new batteries. Not wanting to mess around with junk I bought two new Diehard Platnums. Started fine the rest of the winter on them but I can't recall if it ever sat for 3 weeks. Started fine all summer.
Fastforward to today:
Truck has been sitting not being started in 2 or 3 weeks, week ago we had 40 degree temps few days ago it was in the single digits. Try to start truck and it just clicks. Notice frost on the passenger side battery (guessing its froze), pull it out and put the newer NAPA battery from the first paragraph in. Truck starts. Let it run a bit, shut it off, unhook the napa battery and leave the diehard hooked up on the driver side and try to start truck, it only clicks so alteast it had power and not froze also. I couldn't hear water in either diehard battery so either they are both froze/almost froze or there is no room for the water to slosh around in diehard platnums?
Last year I tried a test where I unhooked one battery completly, put a meter set to miliamps between the NEG battery post and the NEG battery cable on the battery thats still hooked up and watched what happened. The number seemed high at first but after 30 or so seconds would drop, then 50 seconds drop again. At which point it would be at a number close to what other vehicles I was trying the same test on would be.
Open to suggestions. Thanks.