Whats up with these remote batteries???

And by changing out the batteries before they die, you mean you change them as soon as you get the "Replace Key" warning...correct? I had waited to long to replace mine after the warning --- not a good experience.
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I also wonder if it's due to brands and in theory all 2025 batteries are supposed to be the same but maybe some are off one way or another by just a tiny amount. I've had to fiddle with one remote with various batteries but I just did Panasonics and they worked fine after replacement. Or maybe the last time I played with the contacts I've got them in the right spot now.
Amazon is supposedly getting better with fakes, but what they do is throw in all the merchandise from various vendors into one bin so all you need is one vendor with fakes and you end up with fakes even when you think you're buying directly from Amazon because they're throwing what they think are all legitimate products into one bin so the fakes mix in with the real ones.
Yeah, no water, you certainly don't want rust to appear. You basically want something like contact cleaner or whatever that dries out completely and doesn't leave any residue behind.
I also wonder if it's due to brands and in theory all 2025 batteries are supposed to be the same but maybe some are off one way or another by just a tiny amount. I've had to fiddle with one remote with various batteries but I just did Panasonics and they worked fine after replacement. Or maybe the last time I played with the contacts I've got them in the right spot now.
Yikes, I guess still can't trust Amazon... I guess there is not a dedicated team to confirm the authenticity of the battery/products in general before just tossing them all in.
I see, and it can be both.
When it dropped to ~3.05V I'd get the warning on the dash. Weird how a 3V battery at 3V doesn't work for it, but then a 12V car batt is kinda deadish too if it's 12.0V, but at least it still works!
So I started charging the battery myself, topping it off so it was no doubt better than the day it was made. I forget exactly what I charged them to but I believe 3.4V, maybe as much as 3.5. That solved the problem in a nutshell. I also replaced the 2025 cell with a 2032, because I'm one of those people that loves to modify things for the better. It takes a little trimming on the key to make it fit, you can't really tell once done, and a 2025 still works if you want. I took a pix of what needs to be trimmed, which I can dig up if anyone is interested. It's also posted here somewhere on a thread where someone had the same issue.
The bigger batt and top charge is so effective that I can't for sure recall the last time I did it, but it's a hella lot longer than before.
I know 99% or more people will have zero interest in charging the batt, but for the few that are:
Since the batteries are very small you need to charge them very slowly or you'll screw 'em up. I forget the current I used but it would certainly be <20mA, probably more like 5. At that rate it might take a whole day to get 3.4V from a "dead" 3.05V batt. Voltage of the batt will climb as you charge and I'm not sure where it'll stop if you simply left it on charge, but since I didn't want to exceed 3.5V, for the keys sake, I'd take it off charge and measure now and then.
If I recall correctly, the first time I did this I used AA batts (3) as the power source, and next time I used 5V from a USB port, which I think was really 5.5V? Plus a resistor to throttle it down, of course. I suppose 330ohms should do the trick. The lower the current the easier it is on the batt, so more than 330ohms is fine, even 1k or more. Just be sure you measure the current, in case you made a mistake. Don't want the thing blowing up during the night
Or you could make a 3.4V charger, if you were so inclined, which is probably what I should've done first, and will do next time.
You can charge the battery more than once. Lithium doesn't seem to mind being recharged, but I don't know how many times before it degrades. I had a few little flashlights that used a 2032 non-rechargable battery and I topped them off dozens of times. Some 2032 batts say "Rechargeable" on them, and I've had a few, and I can't tell the difference. My guess is there is no difference, but they'd prefer you don't recharge them so they can sell more.
Alkaline, on the other hand, like a typical AA, I see degradation the first recharge. More the second, and so on. So for those I usually only charge once or twice, then toss 'em. In case anyone was interested, because I hate buying batts all the time so this basically doubles their life. Think of the environment, you're recycling first hand




Sleepless fob battery...
Fob batteries can last a long time if they are allowed to sleep - The fact yours doen't proves it is overworked. I used to have that ridiculous nightmare...
Distributed control...
Our key transmitters chat with antennaes scattered inside and outside the car. These connect to a keyless module that networks with Ignition Key module that authenticate ID's to enable activities
MB Keyless chaos...
The keys and antennaes work fine. The issue is with the marginal Keyless module interfacing over a busy CANBus jamed by goofy DCU traffic to the crazy EIS Module gone wild.
This generates boat load of retransmits the coincell in the fob pays for.
Non-stop...
The fun doesn't end when you shutoff the car. The main battery pays for sleepless system waking up for prolonged periods and draining the starter battery. Same polling game retransmits except car modules drain more power than tiny fob.
Best practice is to float-charge your main battery as needed to preserve it from going too low.




