Watch: Summer heat is the real killer of truck batteries

Watch: Summer heat is the real killer of truck batteries

If you want to avoid dealing with dead battery headaches when the weather gets cold, you need to focus on your battery maintenance and service processes as the mercury rises.

Click here to watch more of FE’s On the Road video series.

Here is a transcript of the video:

There’s an old adage in the world of truck batteries that you’ve probably heard if you’ve ever spoken with a heavy-duty battery or electrical system expert: “Summer heat and sun are what kills a battery; it just doesn’t know it’s dead until it gets cold.”

Not only are we rolling into the dog days of summer, but your equipment duty cycles have likely changed in the past six months, or you’ve rolled your trucks into new applications. All of these things will affect your batteries, so it’s best to talk about how we can keep them working now.

The summer heat speeds up the battery aging process by overcharging the battery, which increases grid corrosion and the degradation of internal components. This increases the likelihood of a no-start in the fall and winter. Now, in the summer months, the common cause for a no-start is a result of over-charging or cycling the battery to power the HVAC systems or accessories. If a battery is fully discharged due to running accessories, the end result will be a no-start situation.

With electronics, the rule of thumb is that for every 10° increase in temperature, the life of that component is reduced by about 50%. You can make a similar comment about batteries. Now, if you start looking at operating temperatures above about 120°, you will almost certainly see it starting to have an adverse effect on the life of that battery.

Summer heat and sun are the true enemies of battery resiliency. Heat even accelerates the self-discharge of a battery. A battery that may have taken two months to discharge on its own in the winter could now take only one month to discharge to the same level due to heat.

So, why are there more failures in the winter?

Well, cold temperatures impact the engine’s oil viscosity, which makes the engine much harder to crank in cold weather. Weak batteries that worked fine in summer and fall suddenly can’t provide the energy to crank a cold engine in the winter. When batteries are cold, they also have a harder time taking a charge.

You May Also Like

Everyone’s talking about AI, but will it make an impact in trucking?

How much of the AI craze will result in real help for fleets?

If you’ve been on the internet in the past year - and I’m going to go ahead and assume that you have - you’ve probably heard entirely too much about AI. Artificial intelligence has been a concept in computing for decades and decades, but use of the term really multiplied with the release of generative AI programs like Chat GPT. It’s got everybody talking about AI, and everybody wanting to release products that heavily feature AI.

Work Truck Week 2024 recap: Here’s what we saw at the show

This week, On the Road is living up to its name as we report from the road at the Work Truck Show.

The importance of wheel bearing maintenance

The wheel bearings are, quite simply, what keep your wheels turning, and with minimal friction.

The proof is in the data: How fleets can use data to their advantage

Sheer data is no good to you on its own. You need to understand what you can do with it, and the ways in which it can help your fleet.

Geotab's Steven White
The pros and cons of wide base tires

For the right fleet, wide base tires may be what you’re looking for. But this only applies to a specific slice of the market.

Other Posts

Trade Show Talk: Trends kicking off 2024

Alternative fuels, connectivity, efficiency—there’s been plenty to report on from trucking trade shows, but which topics stuck out most?

trade-show-Talk-work-truck-week-tmc-geotab-connect-hdaw
J&R Schugel wraps Kenworth T680s to support driver causes

After a driver beat breast cancer, the company wrapped her truck in pink and white to support her goal of raising awareness.

JR-Schugel-breast-cancer-awareness-truck
A ‘Toward Zero’ emissions Q&A with Volvo Trucks’s Roger Alm

Talking through the challenges, the technological advances, and the strategies for a sustainable future.

Volvo-Trucks-roger-alm-world-volvo-sustainability-1400
Careful considerations for new EV landscape

Ryder released a whitepaper to help customers make informed EV decisions, including assessing fleet needs and calculating cost.

EV-uncertainty-questions-electric-generic-charging-fleet-infrastructure-truck