strutaeng
Full Access Member
Our 2013 Town and Country had a mysterious battery drain problem. It was so random. Usually my wife would get it to go pick up the kids from school and the thing would be completely dead. Somehow I found a little gadget you plug into the fuseblock: unplug 2 fuses, plug gadget in and replug 2 said fuses into the gadget. IIRC, the tipm causes the fuel pump relay to remain on after the engine is off, draining the battery completely. But after the gadget was installed it hasn't had that issue.
A few years after that I had a no-charge issue. That one was more challenging to diagnose. I wound up getting an older scope and determined the ECU was not PWM commanding the alternator to charge. I ordered a remanufactured ECU. To my luck, they sent me an ECU that wasn't programmed correctly. When I put it in, it had all kinds of codes. Eventually I figured it out and got it warrantied. By now, the thing had been sitting for a year. We had bought a 2020 Express Van since we had outgrown the minivan, so that's what my wife has been driving. I'm glad those full sized vans are so old school and reliable.
We still have the minivan for miscellaneous errands...I think it only has like 88k.
A few years after that I had a no-charge issue. That one was more challenging to diagnose. I wound up getting an older scope and determined the ECU was not PWM commanding the alternator to charge. I ordered a remanufactured ECU. To my luck, they sent me an ECU that wasn't programmed correctly. When I put it in, it had all kinds of codes. Eventually I figured it out and got it warrantied. By now, the thing had been sitting for a year. We had bought a 2020 Express Van since we had outgrown the minivan, so that's what my wife has been driving. I'm glad those full sized vans are so old school and reliable.
We still have the minivan for miscellaneous errands...I think it only has like 88k.