Grumble.
Jess' car's battery was completely dead when she went to use it last
week. Completely dead meaning no lights or anything. I checked the
voltage with my multimeter and found the battery could only provide a couple dozen millivolts, which I thought was unusual for most normal car battery
problems (and the battery is only 4 months old). My thought was something was leaving a load on the battery
even when the car was off. But since I know next to nothing about cars I
didn't put much stock in the idea.
We jumped it and it ran fine and the alternator was providing a charge
voltage (tested with my multimeter), though I don't have the ability to
test how much current the alternator is providing. A couple days later,
Jess goes to drive somewhere and, again, the battery is completely
dead. So we jumped it and drove it to the shop.
I tell them what's up, along with my thought that something is leaving a
load on the battery. Their tests determine that the alternator is not performing
correctly and replace it for somewhere north of $500 for parts and
labor.
Yesterday, we pick up the car and it seems fine.
Today, Jess tries to drive it somewhere and it won't start and the
battery is low. It's down to 9 volts and, after some finagling to get the alarm to be quiet, I was able to determine that one of the circuits (meaning the circuit running through a specific fuse) is pulling a load off the battery of several hundred milliamps to
almost a full amp (but I can't tell for sure how much since the battery
is so low now).
I understand some load is normal (since you want things like your radio to keep its settings and your remote lock/unlock to work), but my reading suggests that up to maybe 50mA is acceptable.
So now I'm annoyed that I was probably right in my parasitic-load hypothesis and yet
we paid for a new alternator. It very well may have needed an alternator, but that clearly wasn't the
_only_ problem, if it even was a problem, which I'm not convinced it
was.
Would it be unreasonable to expect the shop to provide some kind of financial consideration when they fix the actual problem?
Well they will certainly think it is unreasonable. Our A/C didn't work in the old Accord we drove. We took it in and they said it needed new coolant. They charged us about $50. We picked it up and the A/C still did nothing. They said it needed a new fuse. We paid for that and picked it up. It still did nothing. They said "oh it needs such and such major overhaul." We paid several hundred dollars for that and we picked it up and....it did nothing. We ended up with 3 different repairs that we paid for and a non-working air conditioner that never worked until that car got totaled. The end.
ReplyDeleteOnce our car needed its brakes replaced--we got them replaced 2x in 5 months. Each time the brakes came with a lifetime guarantee. When we finally confronted the auto place about it (when we needed a THIRD set of brakes in 6 months), they did the REAL repair the car needed, free of charge, and put in the new set of brakes free. Not perfect, since we still had to pay for the earlier brakes, but at least the final solution was free for us. I think it's reasonable to expect the shop to be mindful of your finances when you take the car back in--they didn't fix the problem they said they did. They owe you one.
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