Is there any way to tell how old my battery is? I don't see any dates on it. I usually try to replace them every 2 years. I bought this Jeep last year.
There should be a circular sticker on most of them, if not it’s normally on the label, might be on one of the sides
Try a good quality AGM battery like an Odyssey, Northstar, Bosch Platinum, and expect more like ten years of life. My previous battery has made by Odyssey and it made it 10 years. I'm now running a Northstar which is very similar to the Odyssey.After reading the posts I looked again and found a circle sticker - Sept 2018.
Most battery folks are keeping scannable records. If you can locate a dealer of that brand they can likely scan that bar code and give you the date of sale.Personally I never like to depend on another man's battery. I like to know where I am starting from. Many batteries are 2 or 3 year rated and you know you have already used half or a third of its life. If you're out wheeling why take the risk. For what little they cost, I personally would go get a new one and not worry about when that one is going to let you down.Is there any way to tell how old my battery is? I don't see any dates on it. I usually try to replace them every 2 years. I bought this Jeep last year.
View attachment 181048
Try a good quality AGM battery like an Odyssey, Northstar, Bosch Platinum, and expect more like ten years of life. My previous battery has made by Odyssey and it made it 10 years. I'm now running a Northstar which is very similar to the Odyssey.
DieHard sells at Advance Auto, but I have no idea the quality anymore.Where did the Sears batteries went? I was amazed with their Diehard gold.
I've had a Bosch from Pep Boys, Die Hard, Ever Start
I wish I could get 10 years out of a battery.
90% where?90% of all the batteries are manufactured in the same place. The only difference is the sticker thats put on them.
According to Consumer Reports May 2019 nearly all US car batteries are manufactured by Johnson Controls, Exide and East Penn.90% where?