Tom, I would use the other power windows as an indicator, or ability to crank car, as indicators of battery. The super duper battery chargers are mostly BS ,as you can tell very little of AH or battery charge state from terminal volts at rest. (engineering fact) Your observation of "charge time makes no sense" is right...% full impossible to tell, from volts, despite fancy claims. Went through this..consider a battery of 80 AH , a good one fully charged, rest volts about 12.6 . Takes about 2 + hours to fill if dead with 35 A alternator ; however if full and you put a trickle charger etc on it over storage (winter) , they are putting out about 100mA ; = .1 amp ; in 24 hours you have 2.4 AH, in 30 days 72 AH; into a battery already full. (2x overcharge) that turns the water to gas, battery is junk after a few months of this. Automatic chargers read volts and try to deal with this , but an unloaded resting good charged battery with 10 AH might read 12.6, as will a bad battery, as will a full battery. Automatic turns on, because of the 12.6, raises to 13.8 and off; repeats, over and over . = See overcharge!!...Approach is a loser. Sick of buying 4-5 batteries every spring. Now I put it on once a month for a few days. Many battery chargers read battery volts by a divider resistor , draining battery into charger if you just unplug the charger --you have to pull clips too..../especially junk ones harbor tool sells. (LED is still on when not plugged in, showing that drain). Note that the car VR raises it to 14 or so, only when car is running..it sits then for a long time ; there is no attempt to maintain charge , once full, just fill it back up to 14 at start --it IS full at 14 on charge for sure . I noted 10 year old Toyotas run like that, still have original battery, yet 300 big new battery on "fancy charger" cannot make one winter without degradation ? Back to PW, You could measure amp draw of motor with 0-20 or 0-30 ammeter, ought to be same up and down with spring right, compare what you see to others ; beyond battery , you might have a problem in motor, stuck brush in brush holder,---ammeter will flicker and waver(and brush is burning) ; assume all rollers free and working. On early ones (Some F for sure) there is a circuit breaker inside the motor at brush. It can get rusty and poor contact, erratic behavior ; I have shorted them out,(solder wire across it) there to protect motor from burnout if kid holds switch after window is up,-- I have taken to drilling drain hole .060 at obvious low place, heater motors too, get condensation out. Best, John G -----Original Message----- From: Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of 'DeBusk Thomas L.' tleed@xxxxxxxx [Chrysler300] Sent: Wednesday, June 18, 2014 11:55 AM To: chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [Chrysler300] Power Window Wars A little while ago, the three little nylon gear plugs in the front passenger window motor in my Hurst vaporized. Not to worry. I just replaced the ones in the driver's side last summer, so with the benefit of experience, I figured the passenger's side would be a breeze. And since Advance Auto sells the exact parts I needed as "Window Regulator Gear Plugs", Item #74410 (for late-model FORDS!), I knew exactly what I needed. If only life could be so easy. Of course I knew the mechanism is spring-loaded. But a client called me on the phone while I was working. Nearly took my fingers off when the clock spring let go! (Focus, focus.) Now if someone wants to chime in with a safe, foolproof way to unload the spring pressure, then I'm all ears, but that's not my most pressing question. After I got finished re-installing at midnight last night, the window was very sluggish going up. Just about refused. Well, I had the car on the battery charger intermittently through the winter, and I hadn't driven it yet this summer because the window wouldn't go up. But the battery was low when I started the window work a few days ago, so I put the charger on it. I have a super-duper modern charger that tells me the battery percentage and volts currently in the battery. After charging and before starting on the window, it was at 100% charge. But by the time I was ready to raise the window, the door had been open for a couple of hours, and the dome light had been draining the battery. I had taken the charger off the battery when I started working on the window, and it now showed only 80% charge when I hooked it back up. After only 15-20 minutes, the charger showed 95% charge, which is a little odd, because it shouldn't charge that fast if you have 80%. But the window worked significantly better. In fact, both front windows had been super-sluggish when the charger read 80%, but both worked OK when it was reading 95%. So here's my question. Is there a "proper" amount of tension on the clock spring when you re-install it? I basically just mounted the center on the split pin and then wound the arm around to the post it engages. Considering how much tension is there, I was just happy to get it installed. I wasn't really thinking about putting extra tension on it. But if I understand it's purpose correctly, it's there to support the weight of the window; the motor just moves the window. What I'm asking is how much of the weight of the window is the spring supposed to carry? A lot? Or just a little? Is it possible to put more tension on it by installing it a certain way, or by putting it in a vice and mechanically leveraging the arm? Is that either possible, desirable, or necessary? Given my scenario, I'm trying to figure out whether I need to go back into both doors and "tighten up" the springs, however you might do that, because they're not "carrying their weight" sufficiently, or am I dealing with a weak battery that's trying to tell me it's time to replace it? Thomas DeBusk ------------------------------------ Posted by: "DeBusk Thomas L." <tleed@xxxxxxxx> ------------------------------------ To send a message to this group, send an email to: Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to bob@xxxxxxxxxxxxx or go to http://autos.groups.yahoo.com/group/Chrysler300/join and select the "Leave Group" button For list server instructions, go to http://www.chrysler300club.com/yahoolist/inst.htm For archives go to http://www.forwardlook.net/300-archive/search.htm#querylang ------------------------------------ Yahoo Groups Links ------------------------------------ Posted by: "John Grady" <jkg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> ------------------------------------ To send a message to this group, send an email to: Chrysler300@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to bob@xxxxxxxxxxxxx or go to http://autos.groups.yahoo.com/group/Chrysler300/join and select the "Leave Group" button For list server instructions, go to http://www.chrysler300club.com/yahoolist/inst.htm For archives go to http://www.forwardlook.net/300-archive/search.htm#querylang ------------------------------------ Yahoo Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Chrysler300/ <*> Your email settings: Individual Email | Traditional <*> To change settings online go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Chrysler300/join (Yahoo! ID required) <*> To change settings via email: Chrysler300-digest@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Chrysler300-fullfeatured@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: Chrysler300-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx <*> Your use of Yahoo Groups is subject to: https://info.yahoo.com/legal/us/yahoo/utos/terms/