Though battery problems are often associated with cold weather,
Consumer Reports magazine says heat is a bigger enemy of car batteries
and will take a bigger toll on performance and reserve capacity. The
magazine recommends that vehicle owners in hotter parts of the country
have their car battery tested after two years of ownership and then
every year after. Those who live in colder areas can wait four years to
test performance and capacity, and then every year after.
"Heat kills batteries," according to John Banta, a Consumer Reports
project leader and part of the team that tests batteries for the
magazine. "Many times in cold climates your battery fails to start your
car on a below-freezing day. The reason this happens is that the heat of
the past summers has weakened your battery. When you use it in the
cold, the starter requires more electrical current to turn over the cold
engine with its thickened oil."
Testing a battery's performance and reserve (or amp-hour) capacity is
not just a matter of seeing whether it will hold a charge (or checking
the electric eye found on some batteries to see if it is green), so
testing is best done by an auto technician.
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