Kenneth Snell
New Member
- First Name
- Kenneth
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2019
- Threads
- 2
- Messages
- 4
- Reaction score
- 1
- Location
- Fairfax Station, VA
- Vehicle(s)
- 2019 Ford Ranger Lariat
- Thread starter
- #1
I wanted to post this since I purchased a 2019 Ranger approximately three months ago and have added 3,300 miles without a mechanical/electrical incident until a few days ago...drove my morning commute and everything was good to go until I parked the truck and turned it off. Much too my confusion, I noticed that although the engine was off, all the other systems were still on and would not shut down (A.C., radio, dashboard lights, etc.). Waited a few minutes and tried to restart the engine but the truck would not respond. Additionally, I noticed the key fob was unresponsive, and the dash board was flashing numerous warnings like "engine oil level low" and "check engine" to name a few.
At this point the truck was totally unreponsive and I was concerned about the battery draining so I pulled the negative lead off the terminal, waited about one minute and reconnected. Not sure what initially happended to the electrical system but disconnecting and reconnecting the battery somehow "rebooted" everything and I was able to start and drive the truck with no issues.
Later that day I drove to dealership and spoke to a service writer. Explained what happened and he had no way of offering
an explaination. I requested that one of the techs run a diagnostic check, but he claimed since I disconnected the battery I essentially "erased" any error codes. Bottom line is that he said they could not do anything for me unless I could replicate the occurance...
Scratching my head at this point I was attempting to correlate this incident with anything out of the ordinary, and realized on the morning the system failed it was incredibly humid where I live on the east coast. I do park the truck outside on the driveway (all the garage space has been taken up by my wife's car and motorcycle), so one logical explaination is that condensation formed somewhere within the electrical system and created a short.
My question is has anyone ever heard of or experienced this type of system failure, and if so, did you locate/determine the source? Any input would be much appreciated!
At this point the truck was totally unreponsive and I was concerned about the battery draining so I pulled the negative lead off the terminal, waited about one minute and reconnected. Not sure what initially happended to the electrical system but disconnecting and reconnecting the battery somehow "rebooted" everything and I was able to start and drive the truck with no issues.
Later that day I drove to dealership and spoke to a service writer. Explained what happened and he had no way of offering
an explaination. I requested that one of the techs run a diagnostic check, but he claimed since I disconnected the battery I essentially "erased" any error codes. Bottom line is that he said they could not do anything for me unless I could replicate the occurance...
Scratching my head at this point I was attempting to correlate this incident with anything out of the ordinary, and realized on the morning the system failed it was incredibly humid where I live on the east coast. I do park the truck outside on the driveway (all the garage space has been taken up by my wife's car and motorcycle), so one logical explaination is that condensation formed somewhere within the electrical system and created a short.
My question is has anyone ever heard of or experienced this type of system failure, and if so, did you locate/determine the source? Any input would be much appreciated!
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