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Parts for your 2010 Holden Captiva 5-Batteries
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2010 Holden Captiva 5 batteries: what they do and how to look after them
Yes, a battery absolutely is used on the 2010 Holden Captiva 5. Technical sources including the Holden Captiva CG Owner’s Handbook (2010), GM/Holden service information, and major AU/NZ fitment catalogues from Century and ACDelco all specify a 12‑volt maintenance‑free lead‑acid start battery fitted in the engine bay, with published procedures for jump‑starting, testing and replacement.
On this Captiva, the battery’s job is to crank the engine, stabilise power for the ECU, ABS, airbags and sensors, and keep lights, locks and infotainment happy. Without a healthy battery, the Captiva 5 can crank slowly, throw warning lights, or reset clocks and radio presets. Most 2010 Captiva 5 variants use a DIN/LN European‑style case, with capacity and CCA varying by engine and trim, exact size and terminal layout should be matched to the vehicle’s tray and cable reach, as noted by AU/NZ battery catalogues.
Replacement timing in Aussie and Kiwi conditions is commonly 4–6 years, earlier if the vehicle does lots of short trips. When servicing:
- Check resting voltage after an overnight park, around 12.6 V is healthy. Under ~12.3 V, give it a smart charge and retest.
- With the engine running, charging voltage should sit roughly 13.8–14.7 V. If the battery light appears while driving, have the alternator and drive belt checked.
- Inspect the hold‑down and terminals, clean any white/green fuzz with a bicarb-and-water solution and refit firmly.
- If replacing, choose equal or higher CCA and the correct DIN/LN case and terminal orientation. The 2010 Captiva 5 is not a stop‑start vehicle, so a quality flooded or calcium‑calcium MF unit is appropriate, AGM is optional, not required.
- Use a memory saver if you want to keep presets, but the Captiva 5 doesn’t need battery “coding.” It will relearn trims after a short drive.
- Recycle the old battery through a parts store or council facility.
Handy signs it’s due: slower cranking on cold mornings, dimming at idle with accessories on, or intermittent electrical gremlins. Confirm with a proper load test or conductance test if you’re unsure.
Technical references: Holden Captiva CG Owner’s Handbook (2010), GM/Holden service literature, Century Batteries AU/NZ fitment guide, ACDelco AU/NZ battery catalogue.
Popular questions about 2010 Holden Captiva 5 batteries
What battery size fits a 2010 Holden Captiva 5?
Most Captiva 5 models take a European DIN/LN style 12‑V battery. The exact case (often in the LN2–LN3/DIN60–DIN66 range), terminal layout and CCA depend on engine and build. Match what’s on the tray sticker or check an AU/NZ fitment guide, and aim for roughly 60–80 Ah and 550–750 CCA.
How long should the battery last?
Typically 4–6 years in Australia and New Zealand, shorter if the car mostly does short, stop‑start urban runs. Heat, infrequent use and high electrical load all reduce life. Watch for slow cranking, repeated jump‑starts, or resting voltage below ~12.3 V as signs it’s on the way out.
Do I need to program the Captiva after a battery change?
No special coding is needed on the 2010 Captiva 5. Use the correct replacement, tighten terminals properly, and expect a short adaptive relearn for idle and trims over the next few drives. Charging voltage with the engine running should read about 13.8–14.7 V.