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Parts for your 2004 Suzuki Jimny-Batteries

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2004 Suzuki Jimny batteries

Yes, the 2004 Suzuki Jimny runs a conventional 12‑volt lead‑acid starting battery. This is confirmed by the 2004 Suzuki Jimny Owner’s Manual and the JB43 service manual, which describe the charging and starting systems. Major AU/NZ fitment catalogues (Century Batteries, Yuasa Battery Finder, Exide application guides) all list suitable replacement batteries for the 1.3‑litre petrol Jimny, typically in a JIS B24 case size with a left‑hand positive terminal (e.g., 46B24L/55B24L or equivalent), along with DIN/N‑type equivalents depending on supplier.

On this compact 4x4, the battery handles cranking the 1.3‑litre engine, stabilises voltage for electronics, and feeds accessories when the alternator isn’t spinning. Off‑roaders appreciate a healthy battery because slow, low‑range crawling and winching can be tough on the electrical system. For daily runabouts, a strong battery keeps cold starts drama‑free and the stereo, lights and HVAC happy.

As part of regular servicing, it’s smart to give the Jimny’s battery a once‑over. Most owners see 3–5 years of life in Australian and New Zealand conditions, but heat, short trips, and accessories (driving lights, fridges, UHF) can shorten that. If it’s cranking slowly, the dash lights flicker at idle, or the remote struggles, it’s time for a test.

  • Check state of charge: 12.6–12.8 V at rest is healthy, under 12.3 V suggests it needs charging or replacement. With the engine running, alternator output should sit roughly 13.8–14.5 V.
  • Inspect terminals and clamps for corrosion. Clean with a bicarbonate solution, rinse, dry, and refit snugly. Apply a light smear of dielectric grease.
  • Secure the hold‑down clamp so the case can’t vibrate on corrugations, movement kills batteries fast.
  • If the Jimny is used infrequently, throw it on a smart maintainer to prevent sulphation.
  • When replacing, match physical size, terminal layout (L/H positive), cold‑cranking amps, and venting. AGM batteries are a nice upgrade for vibration resistance, otherwise a good quality flooded lead‑acid meets OEM needs.
  • After installation, reset clock and presets, and confirm the alternator is charging correctly.

Technical sources referenced: Suzuki Jimny 2004 Owner’s Manual, Suzuki Jimny JB43 Service Manual, Century Batteries AU/NZ application guide, Yuasa Battery Finder (AU/NZ), Exide Batteries fitment catalogue.

Popular questions about 2004 Suzuki Jimny batteries

What battery type and size suits a 2004 Suzuki Jimny?
Most AU/NZ catalogues recommend a 12 V lead‑acid battery in the JIS B24 case with left‑hand positive (commonly 46B24L or 55B24L), or an equivalent DIN/N‑type depending on brand. Choose a unit with adequate CCA for your climate and accessories, AGM options offer better vibration resistance for off‑road use.

How long will a Jimny battery last in Australia or New Zealand?
Expect around 3–5 years. High heat, short urban trips, winching, or lots of camping accessories can shorten life. Regular checks, clean terminals, a good hold‑down, and a smart maintainer for infrequent use help stretch its lifespan.

Why does my Jimny battery keep going flat?
Common causes include short trips that never fully recharge, ageing batteries with reduced capacity, parasitic draws from accessories, poor terminal connections, or a weak alternator. A quick charge‑system test (resting voltage and running voltage) plus a load/CCA test will pinpoint the issue.

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