The red lamp on steady indicates the alarm is in "valet" mode. If you'r
not using it, this is where you want it. If a tester shows the battery i
charged and in good condition, but your car requires a jump start, there'
either a problem with the cable connections to the battery or a proble
with the tester.
Save the more complicated diagnosis of a parasitic draw (something runnin
down the battery) until you work out the issue with the batter
connections/tester
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Owl - 12 Jun 2008 20:32 GMT
That red light has never been on before and the car ran. Now that it's on
the car won't start and it's draining my battery, I do not want it there,
heh. I read online others have had this happen too so I know I'm not crazy.
Anyway, I've been told it's in "program mode" which is why it won't allow me
to start the car and why it's draing my battery, it's up and waiting for
commands I can't give it. I'm just getting the damn thing disabled as I
don't even use it.
> The red lamp on steady indicates the alarm is in "valet" mode. If you're
> not using it, this is where you want it. If a tester shows the battery is
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
> Message posted using http://www.talkaboutautos.com/group/alt.autos.hyundai/
> More information at http://www.talkaboutautos.com/faq.html
Bob - 13 Jun 2008 05:07 GMT
> That red light has never been on before and the car ran. Now that it's on
> the car won't start and it's draining my battery, I do not want it there,
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
> commands I can't give it. I'm just getting the damn thing disabled as I
> don't even use it.
Think bad battery. Bad cell will result in both the inability to start the
car, and the supposed "instant" recharge. All the battery charger is doing
is measuring voltage, not putting a load on the battery. Also, the fact that
your charger says 96% after sitting off charge for a while does not indicate
much of anything. Think this through... Your meter in your charger says the
battery is fully charged. That probably means that it doesn't draw much
current from the charger, and it sees in the neighborhood of 14 volts at the
terminal while it is trying to charge. Supposed fully charged battery, but
it won't crank the car. You put a source of current with some oomph behind
it - the charger in jump start mode - across the battery, and the car
starts. Battery can't make enough current to start the car.
There is NO WAY that the little LED, or the support electronics for the
alarm will kill the battery in 10 Minutes. Get it to an Advance or Auto
Zone, and let them load test the battery. It will probably fail miserably.
The light is likely on because you've gone real low in bus voltage in the
car when you've tried starting it, and the alarm module is confused. It
might fix itself when you completely disconnect the battery in the process
of replacing the defective one. If it's only six months old, the new one
will probably be free.
hyundaitech - 12 Jun 2008 21:54 GMT
Your alarm is not preventing you from starting your car. I know thi
because you can jump start your car. This wouldn't be possible if th
alarm were locking out the starter
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Edwin Pawlowski - 13 Jun 2008 00:48 GMT
> Your alarm is not preventing you from starting your car. I know this
> because you can jump start your car. This wouldn't be possible if the
> alarm were locking out the starter.
In addition to your other suggestions, I'd check the ground and the starter
cable. Enough power for light sis very little compared to the draw of a
starter and a dirty connection can prevent turnover.
Advance swore up and down the battery was fine and refused to honor the
warranty. Took it to auto zone and just told them to pull it out and give
me a new one. Drove home fine. Went to get back in the car I open the door
and bam alarm goes off. Apparently now that I have a new fully charged
battery my alarm now has enough power to just go off on it's own non stop
and wake the neighbors. I liked it better when it was silently sucking my
battery dry. I just disconnected the battery to stop it, I'm going to have
to have it towed to the dealer now as I can't even drive it, it wasn't a bad
battery :(
> > That red light has never been on before and the car ran. Now that it's
on
> > the car won't start and it's draining my battery, I do not want it
there,
> > heh. I read online others have had this happen too so I know I'm not
> > crazy.
> > Anyway, I've been told it's in "program mode" which is why it won't
allow
> > me
> > to start the car and why it's draing my battery, it's up and waiting for
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> car, and the supposed "instant" recharge. All the battery charger is doing
> is measuring voltage, not putting a load on the battery. Also, the fact
that
> your charger says 96% after sitting off charge for a while does not
indicate
> much of anything. Think this through... Your meter in your charger says
the
> battery is fully charged. That probably means that it doesn't draw much
> current from the charger, and it sees in the neighborhood of 14 volts at
the
> terminal while it is trying to charge. Supposed fully charged battery, but
> it won't crank the car. You put a source of current with some oomph behind
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
> of replacing the defective one. If it's only six months old, the new one
> will probably be free.