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Ford Fiesta 2008 Battery Drain

Messages
2
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0
City
Amsterdam
State
Non-US
Country
Netherlands
What I Drive
Ford Fiesta 2008
#1
Hi everyone,

For the past few weeks my Ford Fiesta has a parasitic drain issue, causing the battery to die after about a day of idling. Using a multi-meter I found a constant drain of 1.8A while the car was fully turned off and doors closed. By pulling fuses and disconnecting parts I found that both the instrument panel and the center console display are the culprits. By disabling both the drain goes down to about 0.3A (still too much). It seems that they both do not properly enter sleep mode despite being turned off. Does anyone have any clue what the cause might be? As I understand the BCM is responsible for sending the sleep signal to both units and it might not be doing that correctly. Is there any way I can test this? Might there be another issue that is causing both the instrument panel and the display to drain so much?
 
OP
B
Messages
2
Likes
0
City
Amsterdam
State
Non-US
Country
Netherlands
What I Drive
Ford Fiesta 2008
Thread Starter #2
Upon further trouble shooting it seems like I can also turn on the radio with the key removed from the ignition. Seems like it does not properly register shutting off the car.
 

Handy Andy

Well-Liked Member
Premium Account
Messages
1,871
Likes
1,341
City
Grand Rapids
State
MI
Country
United States
What I Drive
2018 Ford Fiesta SE HB
#3
Might want to check those Relays - although a long shot, the wiring harness can possibly have a short caused by corrosion in the connection points - so some connectors you can get at - monitor the drain watching that meter - and if it stops (drops to zero or thereabout) when you separate a particular connector - the condition exists in that harness and it's parts that connect to those wires.

Also the sections you mentioned - one being the radio and much of the console, might be due to a faulty entertainment system using capacitors that are drying out and creating a load on the electrical thru the "keep alive" memory or settings in the main stereo head unit. Although it can be fixed, it is not easy and to locate the technology of that era to replace those particular parts is not an easy task - thinking older radio shops - which their herd and parts resources are getting thinner and thinner.

Being it's 2008 finding a working stereo Head unit might be a hard one to locate - only way to verify that the head unit is causing this; is to find the harness pull it (by taking apart the dash to remove the radio to pull it's harness) and or it's particular fuse and see if the meter agrees . The problem here is the latter models use a separate module as a means to store settings and add versatility. Using Ford's infinite wisdom - they abandoned the older Ford Audio System for a newer type of infotainment called SYNC that was originally developed thru a joint venture with Microsoft as a means to expand a vehicles likeability and ability to entertain using various media formats. Didn't seem to last long as for the platforms and their support also got left behind.

So the main culprits are corroded oxides left on connectors, onto failing wire insulation or bad parts that are supposed to hold a charge are now demanding more power to "Hold their charge".
 


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