smurfslayer
Be vewwy, vewwy quiet. We’re hunting sasquatch77
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2016
- Posts
- 17,456
- Reaction score
- 26,800
Batteries are actually one of the most common failures on new vehicles across the industry. There are only a couple of manufacturers that make them, so they are just relabeled by brand.
Start by checking the voltage across the terminals with a volt meter. A normal reading is 12.6. Any less than 12V and the battery is discharged.
The error messages are certainly concerning. However, sometimes a malfunction in one control module tends to make other modules downstream puke. My 2018 has been "healthy" since birth. (Knock on wood) The more I read about the Gen 3's, the more skeptical I get with Ford's post covid QC.
While the new vehicle is a ’system’ of components, a defective battery can easily pass initial tests and then degrade quickly. IF the battery ends up being the culprit here, I’d caution against blaming Ford for that failure at least. While I agree generally that the covid era and post covid QA and QC is down, let’s reserve judgment.