STW
Well-Known Member
agreeing here with CarbonSteel and Rhinebeck and others.If the auxiliary was bad, it likely took out the main with it. I had this happen to me and it did not take very long for it to happen. My OE died within 3 years and 50K miles (sounds like a familiar timeframe, right?).
I would wonder about the actual health of the main battery, though most auto parts stores cannot properly test it. The other thing to check is the N3 fuse in the high amp fuse array especially if you worked on the aux battery.
When I was getting dash warnings and ESS-not-available warnings, the Jeep would still start and I thought it was ok. When I tested the aux and main, neither would hold a charge. Still the Jeep would start. I did the jumperless bypass and "Repair mode" on the Noco 10 charger helped enough that both batteries eventually could hold a charge. But even with the aux bypassed, I was showing way low cranking voltage on the main: cranking voltage in the 8v range often but mostly in the low 9v range. That's indicative of damage to the battery, likely from the chronic drain and low charge state it had been under before the bypass. Days are numbered for a battery in that condition.
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