I know there have already been many battery drain threads posted, so sorry if this is redundant, would appreciate an accurate answer:
I have a 2015 Sprinter 3500 built out by PleasureWay. It has 2 LI batteries in rear that run all the 'RV' type appliances and add-ons, and the correct size brand-new Interstate battery under the floor board for the engine and all car-related accessories (front cockpit dome lights, headlights & rear lamps, etc.)
Though brand-new and fully tested for both amps and cranking, the engine battery drains to non-starting even after just 5-7 days of being parked.A solar battery-maintainer, clipped to the engine-compartment terminals, helps somewhat, and my NOCO Genius battery-booster turns it over if it's full -dead.
No inner or outer lights are left on when parked, and although I know there can still be a slight 'computer' drain over time, I cannot figure out what could be draining a full new battery to such low/dead levels in under a week or two.
Any clarity on this would be greatly appreciated, thank you.
I have a 2015 Sprinter 3500 built out by PleasureWay. It has 2 LI batteries in rear that run all the 'RV' type appliances and add-ons, and the correct size brand-new Interstate battery under the floor board for the engine and all car-related accessories (front cockpit dome lights, headlights & rear lamps, etc.)
Though brand-new and fully tested for both amps and cranking, the engine battery drains to non-starting even after just 5-7 days of being parked.A solar battery-maintainer, clipped to the engine-compartment terminals, helps somewhat, and my NOCO Genius battery-booster turns it over if it's full -dead.
No inner or outer lights are left on when parked, and although I know there can still be a slight 'computer' drain over time, I cannot figure out what could be draining a full new battery to such low/dead levels in under a week or two.
Any clarity on this would be greatly appreciated, thank you.