Camaro Battery tender
I purchased the Camaro battery tender from TGMPG (good price and quick shipping) and plan to use it all winter while the car is under cover in the garage - but a couple of quick questions:
1. I'm allergic to reading instructions, so forgive this one - but should I connect the leads to the terminals under the hood or is connection directly to the batter required? (hoping the former, because there is no good access behind the trunk wall... 2. How long have you gone without starting your '17 Camaro - and how long should one expect to go before there is some loss of battery charge? Even this time of year I might go a couple of weeks... just curious. Thanks - and yes I deserve the usual RTFM responses....:rolleyes: |
I have kept all of my summer toy cars on a tender for years. When not in use, I plug the car in and forget it. I plugged mine into the battery direct on this Gen6. I made a harness that lies in the trunk. Open the trunk and plug in the car.
The only issue I had one once my C6 corvette was plugged in, and really bad thunderstorm rolled thru. We got a very close lightening strike, and it caused a surge that came the tender and smoked it. Caused $3000 worth of damaged to the car because of that surge. Blew the BCM and a couple of sensors. And those cheapy surge protectors wont save you either, if you have close strike. So when it storms I un-plug the car first thing. |
I'm a Gen 5 owner but I just connect mine to the 2 terminals under the hood and let it go. Never had a problem doing that.
|
The factory one is high quality. CTEK I believe. IF there is one with adequate surge protection....it's a CTEK. I also use the under hood fuse box area connections.
|
I have one, though not from GM or anything.
Just be aware that AGM batteries are fully charged at a slightly lower voltage than regular lead acid batteries and that the charger has to be aware of AGM chemistry, or you should use the cold-temp setting on your charger. If it doesn't have any such option, I wouldn't use it unless it was only for AGM batteries or you risk either overcharging your battery or overheating it. AGM batteries are very sensitive to heat and charging too fast (not a problem with trickle charging) may cause it to charge too hot (50C is the max core temp before damage starts occuring). in other words, dont cheap out with a plain old trickle charger or you could damage the battery, especially for those who either leave it plugged in for days on end or are charging a dead battery. Edit,. I wouldn't go more than 4 days without running the car. I think a week is pushing it depending on outside temps |
Quote:
|
Quote:
The reason I bought the "CAMARO" tender was precisely so that I would feel comfortable knowing that it was rated for this car and battery system, as there are a lot of options on the market. |
Quote:
This way on a rare nice winter day here in Canada I can take the car for a good rip on short notice but sadly that doesn't happen too often here:) |
Read up on CTEK who makes the chargers offered with our cars. They are very technical, and top of the line. I have several friends in the A/V industry who would ONLY trust CTEK.
http://smartercharger.com |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
is the battery we have in our cars AGM or lead acid. The charger that comes with are cars says for lead acid batteries on the front page.
|
I have an additional question.
Do you make any other special preparations for the tires during the winter season? I am worried that they will become "flat" - suggestions? |
Almost two weeks now since I've started the car - and it might be two weeks more. I guess I'd better hook this tender up and give it a try!
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:05 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.9 Beta 4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.