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isabell_dark10

Frontier Electrical Problems Overvoltage

I'm experiencing some electrical issues with my 2004 Nissan Frontier diesel. I've been getting many fault memory entries relating to overvoltage, along with the failure of various systems. I've also noticed a weak battery when starting, and some general electrical malfunctions. My Frontier has 57814 km on the clock. I suspect a heavily discharged or defective battery. Any thoughts before I start digging deeper into the car ECU and circuit protection?

Summary of the thread

The conversation revolves around electrical issues in a 2004 Nissan Frontier, specifically overvoltage errors and system failures. The initial suspicion was a heavily discharged or defective battery. However, advice from another individual suggested checking the battery terminals and alternator. Ultimately, the problem was identified as a faulty alternator, which was causing the overvoltage and subsequent errors. Replacing the alternator resolved the issues.

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4 comment(s)

dominikloewe15

Whoa, sounds familiar! I had a similar problem with my Frontier not too long ago. Overvoltage codes popping up left and right. Check your battery terminals first; make sure they're clean and tight. A loose connection can cause some seriously weird electrical gremlins. Also, give the alternator a good once-over. How old is your battery? That's where I'd start, did you check your car battery?

isabell_dark10 (community.author)

Thanks for the quick response! The battery terminals seem fine, I cleaned them a few weeks ago. The battery is probably about 4 years old, so not brand new, but not ancient either. When you had the issue, did replacing the battery solve the problem, or was there more to it? I want to avoid just throwing parts at it and potentially damaging more sensitive components.

dominikloewe15

Yeah, I hear you about not wanting to just replace parts willy-nilly. In my case, it ended up being a bad voltage regulator in the alternator. If your battery is only 4 years old, that could still be the issue. Given the overvoltage codes and system failures, you might want to get it scanned professionally. A workshop should be able to pinpoint it pretty quickly and avoid further damage.

isabell_dark10 (community.author)

Appreciate the insights! I took your advice and brought it to the workshop. You were right, the alternator was faulty and caused the overvoltage which resulted in a cascade of errors. They replaced the alternator and checked the battery, the final repair cost was 290€. Everything is working fine now. Thanks again for pointing me in the right direction!

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NISSAN

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FRONTIER