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I recently hooked up a battery tender to my '24 EB FX4 truck, to accommodate our infrequent use and short trips. I followed the advice of several posts here to hook the positive to the battery positive and the ground to a chassis ground, much as you would for jumping a car. Things seem to be working fine (although the charge time seems a little longer than my old Nissan with less advanced electronics).
But now I wonder why not just hook up to the negative post directly?
Other posts imply this is to avoid "confusing" the battery sense piece (resistor/current sensor?) by the negative post and the battery control module, but why would that matter? I assume the battery control module can't really do anything with the engine off. So what if some charge snuck in around the sensor overnight? Anybody tried this?
But now I wonder why not just hook up to the negative post directly?
Other posts imply this is to avoid "confusing" the battery sense piece (resistor/current sensor?) by the negative post and the battery control module, but why would that matter? I assume the battery control module can't really do anything with the engine off. So what if some charge snuck in around the sensor overnight? Anybody tried this?
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