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Parts for your 2006 Holden Captiva 5-Batteries
Narva Model 72 Rear Stop/Tail/Indicator Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable
Narva 9-33 Volt LED Rear Stop/Tail, Right Hand Squential direcion indicator and reverse lamps with in built retro reflector and 0.5m hard wired cable - 97312R
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Narva Model 72 Rear Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable
Narva Model 70 Rear Stop/Tail/Indicator Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable
Narva MDL34 Stop/Tail/Indicator Light With Licence Plate Lamp LED 12V - 2 Pce - 93440BL2
Narva Model 70 Rear Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable
Narva 9-33 Volt Surface Mount LED front end outline marker(white) with Chrome cover and 0.5m cable and Deutsch connector - 96812-D
Narva Model 70 Rear Stop/Tail /Indicator Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable, Bulk Pack Of 4 - 97000-1/4
Narva Model 70 Rear Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable - 97010-1
Narva 9-33 Volt Surface Mount LED rear end outline marker lamp(red) with Black cover and 0.5m cable - 96832B
2006 Holden Captiva 5 Batteries — Purpose, Care, and When to Replace
Yes, the 2006 Holden Captiva (CG series) uses a 12‑volt starter battery. This is confirmed by the Holden Captiva CG Owner’s Manual (2006), GM service information for the CG platform, and Australian application catalogues from Century Batteries and ACDelco, all of which list a conventional 12 V lead‑acid battery for Captiva petrol and diesel variants. So batteries are absolutely relevant to a 2006 Holden Captiva 5.
In this model, the battery does the heavy lifting at start‑up, cranking the engine and powering the ECU, fuel system, and ignition. Once running, it stabilises voltage for the lights, infotainment, HVAC, and safety systems while the alternator keeps everything topped up. There’s no hybrid or stop‑start trickery in a 2006 Captiva, so a quality maintenance‑free lead‑acid (often calcium/calcium) unit that meets or exceeds the original cold‑cranking and capacity specs is the go.
For owners keeping their Captiva 5 in good nick, plan on 3–5 years of real‑world battery life in Aussie and Kiwi conditions. Replacement picks usually fall in the mid‑size European DIN footprints (commonly H5/L2 or H6/L3 depending on engine and trim). Match polarity, terminal layout, height, and ensure the CCA rating meets or beats the factory spec listed on the battery label or in the owner’s handbook.
- Tell‑tale signs it’s time: slow cranking, dim lights at idle, battery warning lamp, a swollen or leaking case, or the battery hitting 4+ years.
- Good habits: keep terminals clean and tight, check for corrosion on the tray and hold‑down, and have the battery load‑tested annually—especially before winter or a road trip.
- Charging health: with the engine running, alternator output should typically sit around 13.8–14.7 V. Lots of short trips? A periodic top‑up with a smart charger helps.
- Replacement basics: back up settings if you wish, switch off, disconnect negative first/positive next