![]() |
Not driving the Boxster for 6 weeks
Any advice on how to prepare my Boxster for not being driven for about 4-6 weeks? It's in a garage, so I'm not concerned about dust or UV, but I'm not sure if this is a long enough time window to require a battery tender. Any other things I could do to get it ready to just sit for a while?
|
Definitely need a battery conditioner.
Tyres should be OK for that time period. I also throw a cover over the soft top of mine. Don’t know about your garage, but my roof gets the odd spider and spider poo on a black roof is not best practice. |
disconnect the battery and leave it sitting.
6 weeks is nothing. |
I wouldn't worry about 6 weeks. Stick it on a battery conditioner if you have one then just leave it.
|
Thanks all for the advice. I'm going to use a battery tender, as I do with my other vehicles, and leave it at that.
|
I unfortunately have not been driving much lately, and in my experience 6 weeks isn't a problem. Just make sure you lock the car, the battery will drain more quickly if you leave it unlocked. A tender isn't a bad idea.
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
If you don`t lock a car now a days, the car wont go into sleep mode. You should lock it and activate the alarm whenever you don`t plan on driving it for a few hours. Car electronics will still think that you are driving it and wont shut off completely (going to sleep), therefore draining your battery slowly. |
Quote:
But I guess this theory can be proven or disproven by looking for parasitic draw when the car is locked vs unlocked... |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Of course, the fact that I use one of these at least part of the time probably helps ;) http://986forum.com/forums/uploads02...1600609692.jpg |
Quote:
But the OP'S Boxster is a 2000 as is mine. Very unlikely that there is going to be a problem with battery drain on a twenty year old car over a period of four to six weeks. The OP lives in Calif. So no cold weather affects on battery drain and if the car has no underlying issues with the car he should be fine. I live in Wa. state and I leave my Boxster untouched for two to three months at a time and have never have a problem. A battery tender is a great idea as they prolong battery and batteries are expensive these days. |
Yeah I was referring to newer cars with all kinds of gadgets. Like I said, I never use to lock my cars when they were in the garage until I had a problem with the 535. I don`t know if OP`s car has any extra gadgets, just a suggestion :).
|
Lock the car...
....When you lock the 986 it goes into “Deep Sleep” after 72 hours. This will significantly lower the battery draw.
You can test this yourself. Lock your Boxster, then leave her for a week. When you return to drive her, try to unlock her with the remote control on the key fob. You will discover that the car does not respond. You will have to physically insert your key in the door to unlock her. Of course, you could also invest five minutes and read your owner’s manual. Just a thought. You spent a bunch of money on a semi-exotic German sports car, the least you could do is spend a lunch break with a cup of coffee and read your owner’s manual. Good luck. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
I would have never thought that a twenty year old car had a "deep sleep" feature. Always something new to learn about these cars. |
Also...
...did you know there are cutouts in the door seals on the bottom of both doors to allow battery maintenance charger cable to fit through the closed door to the cigarette lighter?
And as far as the 200 plus pages of the owner’s manual, there is a handy thing called an “index” in the back that shows you what page number the info you are searching for is located on. Actually less than five minutes to look up the deep sleep mode. Reading. Pass it on. |
Quote:
http://986forum.com/forums/uploads02...1600748776.jpg While the manuals themselves can be helpful, many/most people would acknowledge that car manual indexes are often not all that complete. Besides, if you’re not familiar with the term ‘deep sleep mode’ how you gonna know to look it up…assuming it was there to be looked up in the first place…which it plainly ain’t. Give it up big guy. I wasn't being a jerk. Instead of researching 224 pages of a poorly-indexed owner’s manual I simply asked a question about why locking your car saves the battery. That's what forums like this are for. |
I’m sorry....
...Our Boxsters go into “Deep Sleep” mode, which the owner’s manual refers to as “Load Switch-Off”, after FIVE days, when locked, not 72 hours as I previously posted.
Cheers! |
First time mine went into "deep sleep mode" scared the heck out of me. I drive Over the road and was out for the better part of a week. Back to the yard late Friday nite, and went to unlock the Boxster to put my stuff in it and nothing. Twang of, " not a dead battery", tried the key and as soon as it was unlocked, all the lights started working as should.
|
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 06:16 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website