This is really minor, it was 6 + months ago. I was coming out of my house and my neighbor was getting gravel bags out of her trunk for her landscaping. She drives a Toyota Corolla and left the trunk lid up while she was making trips back and forth to the car. We got into a conversation and while we were talking we both saw her trunk lid move up and down three times. There was no wind.
Especially with worn gaslifts.
Maybe all three batteries were replaced at the same time, and they were all from the same manufacturer's bad batch.
I am sure there is an explanation for this one, but not being a mechanic, I can't figure it out and I couldn't reproduce it at the time.
We had three cars in my family growing up, we all got up to go to school or work respectively one morning and all three car batteries had exploded over night. The sides of the batteries were so blown out that it made it very difficult to get them out to put in replacements. My first guess would have been a lightening strike but there was no storm that night. What could cause that?
battery fairies came by expecting a sacrifice, you didn't leave one so they destroyed the batteries.
Or it could have been vandalism, how do you make a battery explode without cranking the car up?
Or it could have been vandalism, how do you make a battery explode without cranking the car up?
the most common way to explode a battery is with jumper cables, when a spark can ignite the hydrogen gas generated by charging. It's why you should always make your last jumper connection a negative one to either the vehicle frame or engine block rather than a battery terminal.
I believe it is possible to explode a battery with a very severe dead short, such as a big wrench across the terminals. I would suspect something like this if three were mysteriously done in one night.
Well, to be honest, I've never done it even once, and in fact I've never blown up a battery in any way, though I have had a couple of extremely dead ones crack in winter, but since it is reported to have been done, I figure it's a better explanation than some. A sample of three is not so large as to exclude some luck.I'm not supporting the idea that a poltergeist ruined the batteries in Jodie's cars (even a little), but I bet you couldn't do this with three batteries and have it work every time.
Or it could have been vandalism, how do you make a battery explode without cranking the car up?
Probably not, but of course it doesn't have to work every time. It only has to work once.I'm not supporting the idea that a poltergeist ruined the batteries in Jodie's cars (even a little), but I bet you couldn't do this with three batteries and have it work every time.
It was probably nanobots after battery acid.
Lead-acid batteries contain a solution of sulfuric acid (H2SO4) and water — the solution is referred to as the battery’s electrolyte. Adding a solute (in this case, H2SO4) to a solvent (in this case, H2O) will lower the freezing point of a solution. A fully charged battery has more H2SO4 than a discharged battery. The additional H2SO4 depresses the freezing point of the batteries electrolyte to around -70 °C. This is a temperature we do not see in Minnesota. However, a discharged battery’s freezing point rises to ~-10 °C. Unfortunately, the temperature in Minnesota frequently drops below -10 °C.
IMO, false memory is more likely to be the explanation than simultaneous and odd vandalism to three different car batteries or simultaneous battery defects on three different car batteries.My memory of the car battery incident might be distorted since it was 35 years ago.... Anyway, vandalism, battery defect, or some such explanation is probably to blame.