entropy
Well-known member
For what it's worth, a week after I got my truck I left on a two month trip and kept tabs on my truck through the Toyota app and everything was fine. No issues with the battery.
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It looks like they had to jump it, then tested it, found the battery to not meet spec, and replaced it.Just found this out, apparently the day it was delivered to the dealer my trailhunter had a dead battery and im not sure if it was replaced or jumped.
EXACTLY my thoughts. I'm also curious, which issue was the causation? Was it the dead battery that caused the control module failure or was it the control module failure that caused the dead batter? Lots of unknowns.....if anyone else has any ideas, feel free to chime in.I might have missed it, but did they do anything to address the brake system control module malfunction? They list it as the root cause of the battery failure, then charged the battery, tested it and replaced it.
A few things I don't understand:
- Why would a deep discharge kill a relatively new battery?
- Was anything done to stop that control module from discharging the battery again?
- Does this mean that we will have to take our trucks in for service when the 12 volt battery dies, so that the tailgate will resume operation?
The way I read it is that the brake module sensed the drop in voltage, even it may only lasted a nano-second, so it throw a code. My Colorado had the same issue. I hooked up my OBD 2 looking at the live data and the voltage literally dropped for a split second and that caused a code.
Not sure what systems is or will shutdown since no aftermarket service data provider has the 2024 Taco available so we cannot look up the codes and what the cause and effect is. With my Colorado, it'd prevent me from shifting between 2WD to 4WD and vice versa.I agree. It’s a safety issue. BCM sensed a drop in voltage and shut everything down. Not sure why the drop to start with though?