Car won't start...think it's the alarm
#1
Car won't start...think it's the alarm
Hey Guys,
For the past month I've been battling a supposed bad battery, and so I bought a brand new Duralast Gold battery last week. Everything was fine until this morning when my car just wouldn't start. I checked the voltage on the battery and it read 11.67V, which isn't the usual ~12.1V, but should still be able to start. I put the key in the "ON" position and everything was working fine (AC, radio, etc.), but after I tried to start the car I just get crank. Another weird thing is that at one time I tried to start the car and got only crank, I took the key out and the car actually started cranking again on it's own. My background on driving habits is that my car is just a weekend car, and I let it sit in my garage for days at a time. My car is a 6MT with remote start alarm (Viper 791XV) and I actually got it installed from Sound Advice from Rudy (on this board). I happen to believe that something is wrong with the bypass module for the remote start which may have messed with my ECU or something. And also that my alarm is just sucking out way too much current then it should be and draining my battery. Please help, any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
For the past month I've been battling a supposed bad battery, and so I bought a brand new Duralast Gold battery last week. Everything was fine until this morning when my car just wouldn't start. I checked the voltage on the battery and it read 11.67V, which isn't the usual ~12.1V, but should still be able to start. I put the key in the "ON" position and everything was working fine (AC, radio, etc.), but after I tried to start the car I just get crank. Another weird thing is that at one time I tried to start the car and got only crank, I took the key out and the car actually started cranking again on it's own. My background on driving habits is that my car is just a weekend car, and I let it sit in my garage for days at a time. My car is a 6MT with remote start alarm (Viper 791XV) and I actually got it installed from Sound Advice from Rudy (on this board). I happen to believe that something is wrong with the bypass module for the remote start which may have messed with my ECU or something. And also that my alarm is just sucking out way too much current then it should be and draining my battery. Please help, any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
#2
it sounds like u may be right and that it may be the alarm. have u taken it back to the guy who installed it in the first place?? that would have been my first move. i don't know much about alarms... but i wouldn't want the car cranking on it's own without any interaction from me! could u imagine what would happen if it just started cranking again while the engine was already running. spooky.
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#6
Originally Posted by G-ThreeFizzle
Actually, now that I think about it, it wasn't actual starter crank. It was kind of like relay chatter. So I still don't know what that means...
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#9
Originally Posted by G-ThreeFizzle
I heard clicking noise when turning the ignition. I doubt it's the battery because I checked the voltage on the battery with a multimeter and it had enough juice to start. I'm guessing it might be the connection from the battery to the alarm itself.
clicking indicated dead battery. Do you have a jump pack you can put on your battery to make sure its not the battery and somthing eles?
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The Viper alarms have an undesired side effect... when you cycle power to them they automatically remote start. If the car DID crank by itself then I would say when you tried to crank the car it dropped the battery voltage low enough that the alarm restarted.
Have them check the starter kill wiring. DEI starter kills should ONLY work when the ignition is on. If they are engerziging the relay at all times it will put a load on the battery. Not a big enough load that it will kill the battery quickly, but enough of a load that the battery will slowly drain over time. If you can, drop the lower panel and try and find the alarm. You should be able to find the starter kill relay, its a small square black relay with an orange, yellow, green and black wire coming from it. If you arm the alarm this relay should NOT click. With the alarm armed you should be able to pull this relay out and insert it back in with no clicking at all.
That is about the only thing I've ever seen a DEI alarm do. Oh, also, if your transponder did latch in and is constantly seeing your hidden key at the ignition I wouldn't try to start the car many times. If the Immobilizer sees 2 keys at the same time sometimes they will cancel out both keys from memory!
Have them check the starter kill wiring. DEI starter kills should ONLY work when the ignition is on. If they are engerziging the relay at all times it will put a load on the battery. Not a big enough load that it will kill the battery quickly, but enough of a load that the battery will slowly drain over time. If you can, drop the lower panel and try and find the alarm. You should be able to find the starter kill relay, its a small square black relay with an orange, yellow, green and black wire coming from it. If you arm the alarm this relay should NOT click. With the alarm armed you should be able to pull this relay out and insert it back in with no clicking at all.
That is about the only thing I've ever seen a DEI alarm do. Oh, also, if your transponder did latch in and is constantly seeing your hidden key at the ignition I wouldn't try to start the car many times. If the Immobilizer sees 2 keys at the same time sometimes they will cancel out both keys from memory!
#13
Originally Posted by KPierson
The Viper alarms have an undesired side effect... when you cycle power to them they automatically remote start. If the car DID crank by itself then I would say when you tried to crank the car it dropped the battery voltage low enough that the alarm restarted.
Have them check the starter kill wiring. DEI starter kills should ONLY work when the ignition is on. If they are engerziging the relay at all times it will put a load on the battery. Not a big enough load that it will kill the battery quickly, but enough of a load that the battery will slowly drain over time. If you can, drop the lower panel and try and find the alarm. You should be able to find the starter kill relay, its a small square black relay with an orange, yellow, green and black wire coming from it. If you arm the alarm this relay should NOT click. With the alarm armed you should be able to pull this relay out and insert it back in with no clicking at all.
That is about the only thing I've ever seen a DEI alarm do. Oh, also, if your transponder did latch in and is constantly seeing your hidden key at the ignition I wouldn't try to start the car many times. If the Immobilizer sees 2 keys at the same time sometimes they will cancel out both keys from memory!
Have them check the starter kill wiring. DEI starter kills should ONLY work when the ignition is on. If they are engerziging the relay at all times it will put a load on the battery. Not a big enough load that it will kill the battery quickly, but enough of a load that the battery will slowly drain over time. If you can, drop the lower panel and try and find the alarm. You should be able to find the starter kill relay, its a small square black relay with an orange, yellow, green and black wire coming from it. If you arm the alarm this relay should NOT click. With the alarm armed you should be able to pull this relay out and insert it back in with no clicking at all.
That is about the only thing I've ever seen a DEI alarm do. Oh, also, if your transponder did latch in and is constantly seeing your hidden key at the ignition I wouldn't try to start the car many times. If the Immobilizer sees 2 keys at the same time sometimes they will cancel out both keys from memory!
#14
Originally Posted by KPierson
The Viper alarms have an undesired side effect... when you cycle power to them they automatically remote start. If the car DID crank by itself then I would say when you tried to crank the car it dropped the battery voltage low enough that the alarm restarted.
Have them check the starter kill wiring. DEI starter kills should ONLY work when the ignition is on. If they are engerziging the relay at all times it will put a load on the battery. Not a big enough load that it will kill the battery quickly, but enough of a load that the battery will slowly drain over time. If you can, drop the lower panel and try and find the alarm. You should be able to find the starter kill relay, its a small square black relay with an orange, yellow, green and black wire coming from it. If you arm the alarm this relay should NOT click. With the alarm armed you should be able to pull this relay out and insert it back in with no clicking at all.
That is about the only thing I've ever seen a DEI alarm do. Oh, also, if your transponder did latch in and is constantly seeing your hidden key at the ignition I wouldn't try to start the car many times. If the Immobilizer sees 2 keys at the same time sometimes they will cancel out both keys from memory!
Have them check the starter kill wiring. DEI starter kills should ONLY work when the ignition is on. If they are engerziging the relay at all times it will put a load on the battery. Not a big enough load that it will kill the battery quickly, but enough of a load that the battery will slowly drain over time. If you can, drop the lower panel and try and find the alarm. You should be able to find the starter kill relay, its a small square black relay with an orange, yellow, green and black wire coming from it. If you arm the alarm this relay should NOT click. With the alarm armed you should be able to pull this relay out and insert it back in with no clicking at all.
That is about the only thing I've ever seen a DEI alarm do. Oh, also, if your transponder did latch in and is constantly seeing your hidden key at the ignition I wouldn't try to start the car many times. If the Immobilizer sees 2 keys at the same time sometimes they will cancel out both keys from memory!
I just checked the starter kill relay right now and I hear it "click" when I arm the alarm. You're saying that it shouldn't? I guess it is putting a load on the battery and drawing out a significant amount of current. I'm going back to my installer tomorrow so they can take care of it. Thanks again Kevin.
#15
No, the starter kill should NOT click when you arm the alarm.
A relay will draw about 60-80ma of current at 12VDC. Like I said, it won't kill the battery in a few hours, but over a few days it will wear the battery down. Its a simple fix, sounds like one wire needs to be changed from a 12vdc to an IGN wire.
The thought behind this is that the Ignition HAS to be turned on before the car will start, so if you hook the starter kill relay up to the ignition wire as soon as the ignition circuit is engergized the starter kill will engage. Its not the most effective way to do it, but it works well and is basically the 'standard.'
Good luck!
A relay will draw about 60-80ma of current at 12VDC. Like I said, it won't kill the battery in a few hours, but over a few days it will wear the battery down. Its a simple fix, sounds like one wire needs to be changed from a 12vdc to an IGN wire.
The thought behind this is that the Ignition HAS to be turned on before the car will start, so if you hook the starter kill relay up to the ignition wire as soon as the ignition circuit is engergized the starter kill will engage. Its not the most effective way to do it, but it works well and is basically the 'standard.'
Good luck!
Last edited by KPierson; 09-16-2005 at 12:34 AM.