WalleyeMikeIII
Full Access Member
A test on a carbon pile tester would tell you for sure.
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The load test you suggest would tell the state of the battery, but there is a need to look beyond this. The dealer should check for battery drain. This can be done by disconnecting the battery terminal and attaching a amperage meter and observing the current flow when the vehicle is parked and has been inactive for a while. When the electrical system has gone to sleep, there should be less than 50 milliamps current. Not sure of the exact spec. 25 milliamps is better. If it is 100 milliamps or more, there is a problem. Something is not shutting down and is causing a drain. To isolate the problem and find the drain, you can pull one fuse at a time until there is a response on the test meter. Whatever the problem, let the warranty handle it.A test on a carbon pile tester would tell you for sure.
I face the exact issue from the day 1 that l receive the car in the showroom,Took delivery 3 days ago.
200 miles on the clock, battery has been dead every time from day 1.
Charged overnight, 2x50 mile trips didn’t help.
The only thing that gets the Yukon to start is a live jump.
Has anyone experienced this ? Once started codes clear, drives fine.
My 2022 Yukon has been to shop because of dead battery 3 times. Currently in shop and they do not know what the problem is. Also don't have Park Assist chip yet. 13500 miles on it purchased, new in October 2022, ordered in Nov. of 2021.Took delivery 3 days ago.
200 miles on the clock, battery has been dead every time from day 1.
Charged overnight, 2x50 mile trips didn’t help.
The only thing that gets the Yukon to start is a live jump.
Has anyone experienced this ? Once started codes clear, drives fine.