chrisspy said:
asavage, yup. You might want to read the thread.
Sigh. I was trying to
not re-read this thread. I've got five posts in this thread already; you might want to take your own advice
.
On the topic of 12v vampire drains, there's
ONE mention by Tony of the BMS and telematics being a drain, and several about a failed Gateway computer causing a consistent 2A drain
[1] [2]. That's it on the topic. Almost all the posts are about opinions on which is the best replacement battery, who's got them on sale, and ditto comments about another dead battery.
I just dragged out my low-amp clamp-on ammeter and put it on the RAV4 EV: 1.2A at about one minute after waking up the car to open the hood, and around .175ma after 20 minutes, when it went back to sleep. These readings were taken separately on both positive battery leads and the figures added together.
The generally accepted limit for idle current consumption is 50ma, so 175ma is high . . . but not really all that high, considering how many people seem to have had problems with dead batteries in this model.
Clamp-on low amp ammeters are notoriously inaccurate, but those reading will be within 20%, so close enough for theorizing. I suppose it's possible or even likely that the telematics and BMS fire up every so often to do their thing. I could borrow a datalogger and map the current consumption over time, but I thought I'd first ask: is 12v vampire drain a known issue with this model?
[later]
miimura said:
Yes. The car has a larger than usual drain on the 12V when parked. This was evident from the start when cars would be dead sitting on dealer lots. This situation also caused many people to have a factory 12V battery that had a short life due to it being drained dead before even being sold.
Thanks for that. I'd only read about the many premature 12v battery failures, hadn't seen this before.
--------------------------------
I run the Odyssey 34R-PC1500T + the Group 34 height spacer to correct the fit. The combo is a bit over $300. I own three of them for some of our vehicles (RAV4 EV, Sienna, another Sienna), they seem OK so far. The oldest one is in the RAV4 EV, and will be three years old in August.