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- Sep 19, 2018
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I think something is draining the battery on my 1995 F250. I'm nervous about it being an expensive repair job (to find out what is draining it). I just got the truck out of the repair shop and the bill was almost $1,400.00. Tonight the truck wouldn't start and it has a brand new battery. I used a fully charged jumper pack on it and it seemed like the truck/battery was sucking the power down when I tried to start it. Still wouldn't start with the jump pack. It was only 20 degrees out. Yesterday it was minus 20 wind chill and I never started it.
I've been having an electrical problem for a long time and a mechanic told me I should take it to a shop that specializes in electrical issues. He gave me two names. But then I let my son -in-law borrow the truck and he blew out the transmission plug. After that the truck had no power on hills. Eventually died on a hill and wouldn't restart with a jump (when my daughter borrowed it).
I had it towed to a transmission shop. Hence the $1400.00 bill. The transmission was fine, but he did fix many things that needed attention. Just not this electrical issue. (I was convinced the transmission had issues and forgot what that other mechanic had told me). The transmission shop spent most of the labor hours on a bundle of wires that were "cut". I suspect it was chipmunks, because I saw them repeatedly climbing up my truck tires.
Without this issue I could sell the truck and break even (because of the demand for used vehicles). But I'm worried this electrical issue will be very expensive.
Has anyone had this problem? I Googled it and it's called a "parasitic draw". What I want to know is if it usually ends up being an expensive fix. Probably nobody can answer that without diagnosing the truck or completing the job. Just super disappointing. I was planning on buying a used topper and leaving around February 5.
Thanks (for letting me vent, if nothing else.
I've been having an electrical problem for a long time and a mechanic told me I should take it to a shop that specializes in electrical issues. He gave me two names. But then I let my son -in-law borrow the truck and he blew out the transmission plug. After that the truck had no power on hills. Eventually died on a hill and wouldn't restart with a jump (when my daughter borrowed it).
I had it towed to a transmission shop. Hence the $1400.00 bill. The transmission was fine, but he did fix many things that needed attention. Just not this electrical issue. (I was convinced the transmission had issues and forgot what that other mechanic had told me). The transmission shop spent most of the labor hours on a bundle of wires that were "cut". I suspect it was chipmunks, because I saw them repeatedly climbing up my truck tires.
Without this issue I could sell the truck and break even (because of the demand for used vehicles). But I'm worried this electrical issue will be very expensive.
Has anyone had this problem? I Googled it and it's called a "parasitic draw". What I want to know is if it usually ends up being an expensive fix. Probably nobody can answer that without diagnosing the truck or completing the job. Just super disappointing. I was planning on buying a used topper and leaving around February 5.
Thanks (for letting me vent, if nothing else.