Dad has a charger and I've done that with success, but the charge
wouldn't hold for very many hours. He checked out the alternator and said it
was fine. I mentioned the regulator possiblity to him, but thus far he
hasn't done anything about that. I could see about buying one more part for
it and trying it before I give up buying the parts. (I had already bought a
starter thinking that might have been the problem - no such luck - so at
least I have one on hand if I ever need it.)
>From: dardal@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>To: "mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>Subject: Re: IML: Hi everyone
>Date: Mon, 16 Dec 2002 09:43:55 -0600 (CST)
>
>Quoting Peggy Sue Jones <jambawoman@xxxxxxxxxxx>:
>
> > It's been sitting for over a month with a drained battery. Dad
> > isn't
> > comfortable working on the electrical system, so I guess I'll have to
> > take
> > it in to a local shop that specializs in Chryslers and hope they don't
> > gouge
> > me. All I know is that Dad says it is not the starter or the
> > alternator,
> > but something I had read made me wonder if it might be the regulator.
> > I'm
> > willing to bet it is in the electrical however. How will I know if I'm
> >
> > being charged too much for any given repair?
> >
>
>Peggy, why don't you buy a battery charger instead and charge your battery.
> If
>it starts after the battery is fully charged, then you either have a
>charging
>system problem (alternator or regulator) or a small short that drains your
>battery. It will be much cheaper this way, and the list will help you
>trouble
>shoot. It may be something real simple. At the end, even if you have to
>go to
>the shop, you will know exactly what to ask them to replace, so you will
>save
>money at the end.
>D^2
>
>