MrFixit
Well-Known Member
Sure, here it is. If someone sees something notable, please point it out.
Nothing in the Electric Powertrain looks unusual to me (except for the 55.0 aH capacity reading).
Sure, here it is. If someone sees something notable, please point it out.
Perhaps your dashboard fireworks are different than the ones some of us have seen when the battery is weak. Did your dealer read OBDII codes that identified the camera as the culprit?My car is also having the multiple warning lights; dealer says it is not the battery but the camera ($1600). Anyone else get this result?
Perhaps your dashboard fireworks are different than the ones some of us have seen when the battery is weak. Did your dealer read OBDII codes that identified the camera as the culprit?
Is your battery new? If it's old, why not replace it first and hope the dealer (and the code) is wrong?
dealer says it is not the battery but the camera ($1600). Anyone else get this result?
I wonder if we will see an uptick in the "multiple warning light" events now that the original 2018 Honda Clarities are reaching their five-year mark when a lot of 12V batteries will be getting to the end of their life cycle. I was still on my original 12V and last month the multiple warning lights happened to me, very similar to the old posts in this thread. I decided to replace the 12V, and after the first few minutes of random warnings, it was all fine and now has been fine (no warning lights) for a month. It could be that just disconnecting the battery was all I needed to do, but I felt it was time for a new 12V anyway, instead of risking it.
Battery failure at the five-year mark is not a certainty. The multiple warnings are false alarms. The risk of a failed 12V battery is minimal.
Replacing a battery prior to failure is an option. However, replacing a battery that might last 6-8 years, every 3-4 years, will have an owner spending twice as much as necessary over time. An alternative which I’ve utilized for many years, is to carry a jump pack, or jumper cables, and use the battery to the point of failure. This practice has shown that 12V batteries, that actually start an engine and sometimes sit idle for months, typically last for 7-10 years, in my experience.
Of all the warnings, the one that fails to display is, Low 12V Battery, which is almost always what caused the warnings in the first place. In a traditional vehicle a weak battery would announce itself to the owner with a slower than normal cranking sound on one or two occasions before failing completely.
In my opinion, the time for a new battery is when the old one fails.
It turns out the 12V battery was not the cause of my five warning lights! On 6/17/2023 I wrote the post above, confident that my new 12V had fixed the problem. But a few days later, the warning lights were back. So I finally took it to the dealer (Sport Honda in Silver Spring, Maryland) and they said my right parking brake actuator had failed! (Don't ask me what that is -- I know I should learn.)
I have been having the multiple warning lights for a good 9 months now. Tomorrow I have my appointment with the dealer to get the recall done and to investigate the multiple warning lights. I hope that its not the $1600 camera repair; but it looks like that is most probably the case. My 12V battery is virtually new, so I doubt that is the issue.My car is also having the multiple warning lights; dealer says it is not the battery but the camera ($1600). Anyone else get this result?