S10 Blazer's radio & clock lose engine-off power
When the vehicle sits for several days, the radio's digital clock loses time and the radio doesn't work until the engine has been running for 5-10 minutes. Battery is new.
I'm thinking there could be an auxilary power capacitor in the radio circuit that is failing, losing its charge very quickly when the engine is turned off, and then slowly recharging when the engine is started.
If this is the problem, does anyone know where that capacitor is located?
If it's not a capacitor, any ideas on the problem and a fix?
I'm thinking there could be an auxilary power capacitor in the radio circuit that is failing, losing its charge very quickly when the engine is turned off, and then slowly recharging when the engine is started.
If this is the problem, does anyone know where that capacitor is located?
If it's not a capacitor, any ideas on the problem and a fix?
Tagged:
0
Comments
I do know this, if modern cars with electronic components such as a digitial clock, sensors, relays, remote door locks, alarms, moduiles, ECM, etc., are not driven for an extended periods of time the battey can run down due to parasitic battery drain. Some vehicles have as much as 50 ma battery drain. For example, an intermitten short in my power door lock relay drained my battery to zero volts after the car had not been driven in four days. I replaced the battery and the relay failed completely and the power door locks would not function. Then I replaced the relay and the door locks worked perfectly. I suspect the old battery was quite weak to start with and did not take much of a short to drain it. It is probably not necessary with a new or good battery but I installed a Deltran Battery Tender and I keep it connected to the battery when I know the vehicle is not going to be used for an extended period.. A battery "trickle charger" such at that type, keeps the battery at full 12V at all times, just as if the car is being driven and the alternator is charging the battery.
You may have a short or bad contacts in the ignition switch.
I know it's not the new battery, strong crank and starts right away.
Still think it could be a marginal electrical power storing component that is going bad. Clock and radio work fine when the engine is running and power is being generated by the alternator.
Should add that on some occasions, the radio has sever static at first, then, as time passes (capacitor gets charged and full power gets through?), the static stops and the sound is loud and clear as ever. This is on a local station with a strong signal.
Any one have a thought as to what might be happening ?
Thanks
Any one have a thought as to what might be happening ?
Thanks
I have a 1995 Chevy Blazer S-10, 6 cylinder, 4WD. After the engine warms up and you are driving down the road, the engine completely cuts out. If you let it cool off for about 10-15 minutes, it will start again, but you get a hesitation for awhile(almost like it is out of gas) and then it cuts out again. This just recenly started happening. The fuel pump and fuel filter were replaced in January 2009 along with plugs and wires. The problem seems to be temperature related (everytime the engine cools down the car starts again). Any suggestions as to what might be causing the shutdown? Thanks.
The other pending trouble codes are P1100 manufacturer specific powertrain trouble code and P0700 transmission control system malfunction. What can I do to
resolve these codes? Will pending trouble codes clear automatically when the problems are resolved? Right now when I clear the regular trouble code, it clears, but the pending ones stay. Thanks.
tidester, host
SUVs and Smart Shopper