93_Clubman wrote:Certainly contrasts with the NA & NB Panasonic battery, which was usually good for 10 plus years in the standard application.
When you switched off an NA/NB they were "off". Not so with an ND...something is always "awake".
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93_Clubman wrote:Certainly contrasts with the NA & NB Panasonic battery, which was usually good for 10 plus years in the standard application.
RBH58 wrote:93_Clubman wrote:Certainly contrasts with the NA & NB Panasonic battery, which was usually good for 10 plus years in the standard application.
When you switched off an NA/NB they were "off". Not so with an ND...something is always "awake".
Mr Morlock wrote:Mazda have to do a problem solving analysis i.e. they have to find the fault. Its not credible that a newish battery is deddy bones after 2 weeks. The workshop at the dealer should know how to do a proper problem solving exercise and if they dont then complain to Mazda Aust. If it was a common fault you would have heard about it on the forum.
JBT wrote:It may very well be a design defect MM. So, flat battery, trickle charger or try to get a solution from Mazda? Your choice OP.
davekmoore wrote:If it's really an issue should Mazda provide a suitable charger to fit a purpose-made socket on the outside of the car?
For what it's worth the only Mazdas I encountered on the yard or in storage with battery issues were CX5s where the tailgate had been left unlatched so the light was on, or BT-50s, of which a small number would randomly fail.
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