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Parts for your 2017 Suzuki Splash-Batteries

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2017 Suzuki Splash batteries

Based on technical references including the Suzuki Splash owner’s and service manuals, Suzuki Electronic Parts Catalogue (EPC), and aftermarket fitment guides from major battery catalogues (e.g., Bosch and Exide), the 2017-registered Suzuki Splash is fitted with a 12‑volt lead‑acid starter battery. Those sources specify a maintenance‑free SLI (starting, lighting, ignition) battery for the Splash/Agila platform, confirming batteries are absolutely relevant to this vehicle.

In the Splash, the battery’s core job is straightforward: deliver a strong burst of current to crank the petrol engine, then stabilise voltage for the ECU, fuel pump, ignition, immobiliser, lights, and accessories. Once the engine’s running, the alternator keeps everything powered and tops the battery back up, but that 12 V pack still smooths voltage swings so sensitive electronics don’t cop a wobble.

For day‑to‑day care, most owners will be fine with quick visual checks and a yearly test during servicing. Look for tidy, corrosion‑free terminals and a secure hold‑down. If the car does mostly short trips, a smart charger every few weeks helps prevent sulphation. Expect typical life of about 3–5 years, extreme heat, long periods parked, or lots of stop‑start traffic can trim that.

  • Health checks: at rest, a healthy battery is around 12.6 V, with the engine running, charging is usually 13.8–14.7 V.
  • Signs it’s fading: slower cranking, dimming lights at idle, clock or radio presets resetting, or intermittent battery/charge warning lights.
  • Helpful habits: keep the terminals clean and tight, drive a decent run each week to recharge, and avoid leaving the car with lights or accessories on.

When replacement time rolls around, match the case size, terminal layout and capacity to the Splash’s tray and spec in the handbook or EPC listing. Choose a quality unit with the right cold‑cranking amps for local climate—many Splash petrol variants are comfortable with a compact 12 V lead‑acid battery in the 40–60 Ah, roughly 330–520 CCA range. For trims without idle stop, a conventional flooded battery is usually fine, if a stop‑start variant is specified in your market, follow the manual’s call for EFB/AGM.

Swap it safely: ignition off, key out, negative off first, then positive, refit positive first, negative last. A memory saver can protect radio presets. The Splash typically doesn’t need battery coding, but it pays to confirm with service data. Recycle the old unit at a battery retailer or workshop—too easy.

What battery type and size suits a 2017 Suzuki Splash?

It uses a 12 V lead‑acid starter battery. Capacity and case size vary by market and trim, so match what’s in the owner’s manual or parts catalogue and check the tray dimensions and terminal layout. Many petrol Splash models run well with a compact unit around 40–60 Ah and roughly 330–520 CCA, but always verify against the vehicle sticker or VIN lookup.

How long should the Splash battery last, and what are the warning signs?

Typically 3–5 years. Hot summers, short urban hops, or long storage can shorten life. Watch for slow cranking, flickering or dim lights at idle, random clock/radio resets, a swelling case, or the charge light teasing on and off. If it’s over three years old, ask for a load test at service time.

Does the Splash need an AGM or EFB battery?

Most non–stop‑start Splash models are fine with a quality flooded (maintenance‑free) battery. If your specific trim has idle stop/energy management, the service literature may specify EFB or AGM—stick with that to handle higher cycling loads and protect the charging system.