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Electrical gremlins despite, but yes I als have logged the car in the past and It seems It comes to life during the original alarm etc in the nightly hours. Thats why my battery dies.
But luckely I installed a charger [img]style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/smile.gif[/img] . Now it stays unfortunatly for more than a month but still starts!
Ritchie owner of a '92 Coupe Tiptronic with the following standardoptions: C00, 030, 139, 249, 258, 340, 383, 387, 403, 418, 454, 490, 494, 567, 573, 650, 690, 14951
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Also check lights in Trunk and under hood.
Regards,
Jay
“Faster, Faster, until the thrill of speed overcomes the fear of death.” - Hunter S. Thompson
"I couldn't find the sports car of my dreams, so I built it myself." ~Dr. Ferdinand Porsche
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Battery would die all the time until I Got the battery maintainer. Quick release plug in. Dead battery however kills the life of the battery. I got this great trouble shooting guide and discovered negative battery cable not too good. After replacing the negative battery cable things were good for a couple years. Now it looks as though the positive cable to the alternator is not so good. Would like to run a cable directly from alternator to battery. Where is the voltage regulator located? In the alternator? Is there any problems running a zero resistance cable in parallel with the existing alternator cable to get more charging juice while driving?
1992 Guards Red, Rare White Interior 6 speed, coupe. 130,000 miles. Garage Kept when not running. Anytime there is a problem, $1500 or less fixes it!!!
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[quote name='Cloud9...68' timestamp='1371090200' post='144227']
If you're finding that your cables are in that bad of shape, I would urge you to give Robby of Higher Connections (I believe they're still a sponsor of this site) a call. He has a very high quality set of replacement cables for a more-than-reasonable price. I wouldn't put this off, either, because it's a good bet that the cable bundle going into your starter is also on its last legs - the insulation around the wires in that bundle tends to wear off, causing a short, which can (and often times has) cause the starter to start on its own. It happened to me while I was driving, and it's happened to people while the car was stationary, causing it to essentially "self-start", a very inconvenient thing to have happen if the car happens to be in gear.
I put a ridiculously tiny battery in my car (to save weight - it's getting converting to be primarily a track car) that looks like it would have trouble starting a lawn tractor, and yet it fires up this beast of an engine with juice to spare, which I partially attribute to my new, low-resistance cables.
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Wow! my first day posting and all this great help! Car loves cold and wet weather, not so happy with hot Florida summer weather. Noticed charging voltage when cold is about 13.6V. After it warms up in the Florida Sun, charging voltage drops to about 12.4V with A/C and lights on (12.8V with everything off). I suspect the resistance in the cables increases greatly with the heat. Battery maintainer when in garage and Solar Panel when parked in the sun seem to help a lot. I get a strong feeling the problem is with the cables. do you have any more information on the contact who sells them? When I first got the car, I diagnosed negative cable bad. I'm cheap, so I got an arc welding cable and ran it from the negative post to the engine block. This solved about 7 different electrical and heat (not enough power for fans ironically) problems almost immediately, that was 9 years ago. Now, The diagnostic "First Things First" manual I bought (best $60 ever spent) is helping me identify the cable from the alternator. I was going to do the same "cheap" trick of running an arc welding cable, but I realize accidental shorting of this "cheap" fix would be very sad. Is replacing the cables a straightforward DIY task? I noticed the positive cable snakes it's way through the exhaust area and then behind the block. Does not look easy to get to. The Pet documentation shows the parts, but I haven't seen anyplace where the actual cable run is pictured.
1992 Guards Red, Rare White Interior 6 speed, coupe. 130,000 miles. Garage Kept when not running. Anytime there is a problem, $1500 or less fixes it!!!
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[quote name='flash' timestamp='1371086146' post='144221']
regulator is in the alternator. it is also well known for wearing out.
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Love this car, but with 3 kids in college stinks to be putting $1200/year in labor to the local mechanic. It also stinks to be working on it all the time. When engine compartment gets hot, charging voltage drops (expected), but perhaps too much (12.4-12.8V). Which is probably exaserbated by bad cables. Also ironic is low battery voltage takes away from the power of the fans which further increase the heat! LOL. Used to think battery was dying because I wasn't driving it every day, now I realize (after discovering NO parasitic voltage leak) that perhaps the problem was always with poor charge. Car runs awesome in Florida winters and on cold wet days.
1992 Guards Red, Rare White Interior 6 speed, coupe. 130,000 miles. Garage Kept when not running. Anytime there is a problem, $1500 or less fixes it!!!