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It's time to treat this 2010 to a new battery. They're only available from Ford for about $120. You need an extension socket to loosen the tie down bolt, resonator bolt and battery terminals and a screwdriver to loosen the outboard clamp on the air intake tube and push it back out of the way. It's hard to break loose the rubber gasket of the air intake tube so be prepared to use a lot of force there. Otherwise, it's easy. Long term fuel economy resets and the dash resets to the default display.

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My wife has a 2010 FFH that's having intermittent 12-Volt Battery problems (starting problems). ...........

The eye on the battery, btw, is black. It doesn't show red or green.

 

If the battery was too low to start the car, how would it gain sufficient charge on its own just sitting out in the cold to start later? My concern is that maybe her depleting the battery the first time or running out of gas may have damaged the battery or electrical system somehow. Is that possible?

 

 

How many miles on your FFH? Just curious. My goodness test is more than 10.3 volts across the battery terminals at a 100 amp load. I have been running my battery with a red eye for 30,000 miles. The dealer said a load test is more conclusive than the eye, but black does not sound good. I did have to add distilled water to the cells at about 80,000 miles. I'm at 102k miles now. There are a lot of people on this forum who know more about the FFH 12 volt battery than I do, but I have seen lots of non-typical behavior with a bad FFH 12 volt battery, due to we are used hearing the battery fail based on not being able to crank the engine and this battery doesn't do that. But the car needs the battery to perform almost all necessary functions. So your battery may be acting almost as weakly as a large capacitor and you are still getting away with it. I concur with others above that you are ready for a new battery. But this failure has nothing to do with the health of your high voltage nickel metal hydride battery, so don't panic on that front.

Edited by VonoreTn

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Sounds like the battery needs a reconditioning cycle. A deep cycle charger(one that can condition, and jump start) could be used to recharge the battery. Usually takes over night. If the battery has any life left in it, this will resolve the problem for a while. What happens is the Hybrids use a DC/DC charger, not an alternator, to recharge the 12V battery. Unlike a conventional car that powers everything off the alternator, and uses the 12V battery for starting and accessory(key on, ignition off), the Hybrid uses the 12V to power everything along with the DC/DC converter. It has very little AMP draw since it isnt cranking over an engine, but powering small current devices instead. The most current draw it will see are the headlamps. Short trips will wear down the battery, and eventually cause it to fail sooner than it should. As mentioned above, it calcifies the plates. These batteries need a good healthy discharge and recharge cycle in order to last. They like valleys and peaks in their capacity, not a constant state of charge or discharge. The big difference between the 10-12 and the 13+ models is the older ones dont have the battery saver messages like the 13+ has, which is a good indicator of a failing battery. The only indicator you have is what is happening now.

 

 

 

I would have the battery fully charged and tested first before replacing it.

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If you've changed car batteries before and know the cautions ( disconnect negative first and connect it last ) you can change this one. The same 5/16 socket fits the rear tie down bolt of the resonator chamber, the battery terminals and with an extension the hold down bolt. A regular screwdriver loosens the outer intake air tube clamp. Twist the tube to break the rubber gasket free and pull the tube off and push it back out of the way and hold it there ( with a rubber band ). Loosen the hold down and terminal bolts , remove and replace and reconnect. It takes about 10 minutes. There's a big core deposit on the battery so if you've got another car, remove it and take it to Ford when you get the new battery so you don't have to make a separate trip. I suspect Ford would charge you 1/2 -1 hour labor to change it. Maybe not, ask.

Weird things happen when this battery starts to have problems. A new battery solves everything.

The comments about reconditioning are true and I have done it many times in boats etc. but with this car and the 4-5 year age of the battery, I'd change it. I just changed the one in my 2010 which was built 5/2009.

I wouldn't take it to a non-Ford local repair shop for this. Nobody has found a non-Ford after market replacement for this battery that does not require modifications. Ford made only 70,000 of these Ford Mecury Lincoln hybrids in the three model years so they're not common. They look just like the non-hybrids so when you take it to an independent shop you have to walk them through every detail of what must be done. They don't need many repairs and most of the hybrid components are still under warranty. Even some Ford dealers are still probably not very proficient in it's different repair requirements.

Edited by lolder

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You should have no more problems. Did they charge you to change the battery?

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$40 is reasonable considering someone is actually doing what you don't want to. I know parts stores will do it for free, but if they break something in the process, doubt they would fix it, where the dealer tech is less likely to break something, and if they do, they fix it.

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That's about 1/2 hour labor charge which is probably the minimum. In you shoe's I might have done the same.

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