I bought a Yuasa 12V 45Ah car battery on 30th May 2023 for my Toyota Corolla from a major supplier on a major selling site (I won’t name names but there isn't many) . This is the same brand fitted to the car when new which served me well for many years. On receipt I charged the battery as directed.
My car has reliably started instantly first time, every time, for 20 years. The car did not have an MoT so was started without problem about every two weeks (probably a total of 5-6 times) and run for about 10 minutes or so. The battery leads were then disconnected. All was fine until the beginning of August then suddenly I had difficulty starting the car. I removed the battery to charge it and found it only registered 6V?? It refused to charge at 12V, various voltages from 6V to 12V, and at various low amp settings. My car alternator was checked and was about 14V which I understand is normal. I had followed this same procedure with a previous brand new battery without any mishap.
The battery had a 4 years warranty through another company so I submitted a Warranty Claim Form. In reply I was given some baffling battery jargon - it was suggested failure could be due to deep or over cycling, or parasitic drain, none of which are covered by the warranty. And possibly sulphation had occurred. Also, any battery that measures less than 10.6 volts is not covered under warranty.
I have to wonder what is covered by the warranty as a drop in voltage is probably the only reason the battery is likely to fail - unless it’s dropped from a great height! The battery cost £60 and I was offered a 10% discount on another battery which I considered derisory.
I subsequently bought the same battery from another supplier and carried on with the same procedure above without any problem so far.
Can anyone suggest a more plausible reason for this battery failure?
My car has reliably started instantly first time, every time, for 20 years. The car did not have an MoT so was started without problem about every two weeks (probably a total of 5-6 times) and run for about 10 minutes or so. The battery leads were then disconnected. All was fine until the beginning of August then suddenly I had difficulty starting the car. I removed the battery to charge it and found it only registered 6V?? It refused to charge at 12V, various voltages from 6V to 12V, and at various low amp settings. My car alternator was checked and was about 14V which I understand is normal. I had followed this same procedure with a previous brand new battery without any mishap.
The battery had a 4 years warranty through another company so I submitted a Warranty Claim Form. In reply I was given some baffling battery jargon - it was suggested failure could be due to deep or over cycling, or parasitic drain, none of which are covered by the warranty. And possibly sulphation had occurred. Also, any battery that measures less than 10.6 volts is not covered under warranty.
I have to wonder what is covered by the warranty as a drop in voltage is probably the only reason the battery is likely to fail - unless it’s dropped from a great height! The battery cost £60 and I was offered a 10% discount on another battery which I considered derisory.
I subsequently bought the same battery from another supplier and carried on with the same procedure above without any problem so far.
Can anyone suggest a more plausible reason for this battery failure?