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Need a New Car Battery? How to Choose the Right Type

Need a New Car Battery? How to Choose the Right Type

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Car battery replacement in your car DIY with Scotty Kilmer. New car battery types, location, inspection, buying and replacement. There’s many types of car batteries out there, and I’ll help you decide which one is right for your car. DIY car repair with Scotty Kilmer, an auto mechanic for the last 50 years.

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I found my car battery next to a dumpster.Thats when I knew it was the one.

Hey Scotty! ALMOST everything you said on here is spot on. I want to add a clarification though. At 1:20 you pointed at the date sticker on the battery. Here’s the thing about that, that “date sticker” is ALSO referred to as a “rotation sticker”. I worked with Interstate Batteries for 5 years. At the distributor I worked at, we were good at only ordering the amount we expected to sell in the next 30 days, so the batteries would always be “factory fresh”. However, there are accounts where we’d leave a stock of batteries for them, and if they did not sell in 3 months, they would be ROTATED for fresh ones. The now 3mo old battery would come back to the distributor to be recharged overnight, and the next day it was put back as available inventory to sell but now featuring a ROTATION STICKER indicating the current month and year. Just as a general rule for warranty purposes, if no date/ rotation sticker is present, there is also the date stamp that is engraved on the battery by the factory when it rolled off the assembly line (all Johnson Controls-made batteries like Interstate, Optima, Motorcraft, Duralast, Autocraft, and others). It’s usually a 5-digit alpha-numeric code but only the first 2 pertain to the date. Letter, and Number. Letter is A-L (first 12 letters, referring to the 12 months of the year), and the number is the year. So for example, a K5RUL, date code is K5, meaning November 2015. Other battery manufacturers use a different, but similar method for dating their batteries at the factory (EastPenn and Exide are the 2 other major players in the automotive battery game, and their subsequent umbrella brands all have their own dating system). So just keep that in mind! That date sticker isn’t always pertaining to the actual age of the battery. Keep up the great work!

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