Carautonomy — car parts and warning lights explained
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Maintenance

What is a Battery Health Check?

Prevents unexpected breakdowns, especially in winter.

+12V12.6VHealthy ≥12.6V resting • <12.4V = weak • <12.0V = flat

Simplified animation — not to scale.

In plain English

Your car battery stores the electrical energy needed to start the engine and powers lights, radio and other systems when the engine is off. Batteries weaken over time and cold weather makes them work harder — a battery that coped fine in summer may fail on the first frosty morning of winter. A simple check lets you spot weakness before it strands you.

A simple analogy

"Like checking your phone battery percentage before a long day out — you do not want it to die when you need it most."

How it works

First, look at the battery itself — usually a black or grey plastic box in the engine bay with two metal terminals on top. Check the date sticker: most batteries last 4–5 years. Inspect the case for bulging or cracks. Start the engine and watch the dashboard battery symbol — it should go out within a few seconds. If your battery has a charge-level indicator, a green window means good, black means flat, white means it needs charging or replacing. For a deeper check, many garages and Halfords branches offer a free battery test that checks cold-cranking amps and predicts remaining life. If the battery is more than five years old or struggles to start the car, consider replacing it before winter.

Signs of trouble

  • Engine cranks slowly or clicks when starting
  • Dashboard battery warning light stays on
  • Headlights dim when idling
  • Electrical accessories weak or flickering
  • Car needed a jump start recently
Rough UK cost

Always get a written quote. Prices vary by car, region, and parts brand.

Heads up: Carautonomy is for general guidance only. If your car is showing warning lights or behaving oddly, get it looked at by a qualified mechanic.

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