Hi all,
I'm desperate for help for my wife's 2005 grand scenic II, 1.6 petrol.
Symptoms:
constant drain of ~ 1.5 A on the battery with the car "at rest", which flattens the battery quite quickly . This is coincidental with the key card not being recognised by the ECU; when fully charged, the card gets recognised and the car starts ok, but even the slightest drop in battery voltage results in intermittent card recognition and eventually in total failure to start.
The car had recently the dashboard and the engine compartment fuse board replaced. It also shows a “Check parking brake” message on the dashboard after the pads and one of parking brake callipers had been replaced. The electronic parking brake works absolutely fine otherwise.
There is no other apparent failure in any other system (writing this, I will check again tonight).
I’ve replaced the battery with a slightly bigger one and changed the key card reader, which obviously didn’t make any difference.
I removed all accessible fuses in the glove compartment and under the passenger seat, one by one to check by process of elimination which circuit would cause the battery drain. With the majority of fuses, when removed, the load on the battery even increased to ~ 4.5A. Removing the fuse for the electronic barking brake (which according to a French service manual is one of the fuses under the passenger seat) didn’t make any difference.
Disconnecting the alternator also didn’t change the load on the battery. I also tried to check the newly installed engine compartment fuse board, but only partly succeeded because of its inaccessibility. I have not checked the solenoid on the starter motor yet, but I doubt it’s that.
1st: Am I right in assuming that the battery drain and resulting drop in voltage causes the ECU to NOT recognise the key card? Unfortunately I don’t have a second card to eliminate a possible intermittent card failure. Obviously, a key card failure wouldn’t explain the drain on the battery.
2nd: What could cause the battery drain? I’m still suspicious of the coincidental parking brake fault but I would otherwise guess its faulty earth somewhere.

I’m pretty handy with the spanners but have up to now refused to touch the car. Our local mechanic is quite good and trustworthy but has honestly admitted of being out of his depth with car electronics. Our experience with the dealers has been atrocious, so it’s my job now.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Tom
I'm desperate for help for my wife's 2005 grand scenic II, 1.6 petrol.
Symptoms:
constant drain of ~ 1.5 A on the battery with the car "at rest", which flattens the battery quite quickly . This is coincidental with the key card not being recognised by the ECU; when fully charged, the card gets recognised and the car starts ok, but even the slightest drop in battery voltage results in intermittent card recognition and eventually in total failure to start.
The car had recently the dashboard and the engine compartment fuse board replaced. It also shows a “Check parking brake” message on the dashboard after the pads and one of parking brake callipers had been replaced. The electronic parking brake works absolutely fine otherwise.
There is no other apparent failure in any other system (writing this, I will check again tonight).
I’ve replaced the battery with a slightly bigger one and changed the key card reader, which obviously didn’t make any difference.
I removed all accessible fuses in the glove compartment and under the passenger seat, one by one to check by process of elimination which circuit would cause the battery drain. With the majority of fuses, when removed, the load on the battery even increased to ~ 4.5A. Removing the fuse for the electronic barking brake (which according to a French service manual is one of the fuses under the passenger seat) didn’t make any difference.
Disconnecting the alternator also didn’t change the load on the battery. I also tried to check the newly installed engine compartment fuse board, but only partly succeeded because of its inaccessibility. I have not checked the solenoid on the starter motor yet, but I doubt it’s that.
1st: Am I right in assuming that the battery drain and resulting drop in voltage causes the ECU to NOT recognise the key card? Unfortunately I don’t have a second card to eliminate a possible intermittent card failure. Obviously, a key card failure wouldn’t explain the drain on the battery.
2nd: What could cause the battery drain? I’m still suspicious of the coincidental parking brake fault but I would otherwise guess its faulty earth somewhere.
I’m pretty handy with the spanners but have up to now refused to touch the car. Our local mechanic is quite good and trustworthy but has honestly admitted of being out of his depth with car electronics. Our experience with the dealers has been atrocious, so it’s my job now.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Tom