*** WARNING: Low Battery = Potential Disaster ***
*** WARNING: Low Battery = Potential Disaster ***
I didn't realize it but my battery was in need of replacement recently. I went on a couple of business trips and each time I came back (gone 5-12 days), I would find the battery had died.
The way one finds out, however, is by trying to turn on the car--right?
WARNING: Attempting to start the car on a low battery can have disastrous consequences!
Needless to say, after trying to jump/recharge the battery, somehow an excess amperage draw (when current drops, amperage rises) fried the main airbag control unit (roughly $500-600). So now I have a permanent red flashing airbag light that WILL NOT RESET (although I have tried five times using the press-on/off start button method).
If you find you have a low battery, do NOT continuously attempt to start. Charge the battery properly or replace.
You have been warned...
The way one finds out, however, is by trying to turn on the car--right?
WARNING: Attempting to start the car on a low battery can have disastrous consequences!
Needless to say, after trying to jump/recharge the battery, somehow an excess amperage draw (when current drops, amperage rises) fried the main airbag control unit (roughly $500-600). So now I have a permanent red flashing airbag light that WILL NOT RESET (although I have tried five times using the press-on/off start button method).
If you find you have a low battery, do NOT continuously attempt to start. Charge the battery properly or replace.
You have been warned...
Amperage and current are the same thing. It's likely that the jumpstart attempt is what fried your control unit, not cranking at low voltage.
What would have gone wrong in the jump start process that would fry the control unit?
I did have to do that once when my battery was too low to start the car, luckily everything went smoothly with no issue.
I did have to do that once when my battery was too low to start the car, luckily everything went smoothly with no issue.
Trending Topics
I didn't realize it but my battery was in need of replacement recently. I went on a couple of business trips and each time I came back (gone 5-12 days), I would find the battery had died.
The way one finds out, however, is by trying to turn on the car--right?
WARNING: Attempting to start the car on a low battery can have disastrous consequences!
Needless to say, after trying to jump/recharge the battery, somehow an excess amperage draw (when current drops, amperage rises) fried the main airbag control unit (roughly $500-600). So now I have a permanent red flashing airbag light that WILL NOT RESET (although I have tried five times using the press-on/off start button method).
If you find you have a low battery, do NOT continuously attempt to start. Charge the battery properly or replace.
You have been warned...
The way one finds out, however, is by trying to turn on the car--right?
WARNING: Attempting to start the car on a low battery can have disastrous consequences!
Needless to say, after trying to jump/recharge the battery, somehow an excess amperage draw (when current drops, amperage rises) fried the main airbag control unit (roughly $500-600). So now I have a permanent red flashing airbag light that WILL NOT RESET (although I have tried five times using the press-on/off start button method).
If you find you have a low battery, do NOT continuously attempt to start. Charge the battery properly or replace.
You have been warned...
thanks for the warning but the only time I have heard of this is when someone tried to charge the battery when the battery was still connected to the car.
I worked in an auto parts store for 3 years and this was the only time I saw this happened. Usually happened to older ladies.
It is possible that a very low battery voltage caused a temporary fault condition in the airbag controller, and now what the OP is seeing is the record of that fault. Putting the car in diagnosis mode and back to user mode might clear the fault. The procedure is outlined in the service manual.
G-DOG
iTrader: (3)
Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 278
Likes: 4
From: Louisville, KY (relocated from Brooklyn, NY)
I've heard of this happening, and experienced this myself in the past due to issues with battery chargers. I had the digital display on an aftermarket (Sony) stereo in my car permanently damaged after a battery charging. You should always disconnect the battery from the car before charging it (which I didn't do). The problem is that many battery chargers have high ripple (inadequately filtered) DC voltage that can wreck havoc on digital electronics in a car.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
04G35NYC
Private Classifieds
7
Jul 19, 2016 01:42 AM
parkern
G37 Sedan
22
Oct 5, 2015 12:12 PM
dedmanchan
Audio, Video & Electronics
1
Sep 24, 2015 11:25 PM




