Slow crank, clicking, dim lights — your battery may be failing. Rogers Cleveland Blvd tests your battery for free, recommends replacement only if it actually needs it, and installs the right battery for your vehicle and climate with a warranty that matters.
Canyon County winters are real, and Caldwell's agricultural and commercial vehicles put extra electrical demand on batteries that are already stressed by cold. Rogers Cleveland Blvd shop in Caldwell does free battery tests and same-day replacement for the full range of Canyon County vehicles — from daily-driver sedans to diesel work trucks that need the high-CCA option. We stock what Canyon County actually drives. Free test, written quote, same-day installation most days.
A dead battery at 7 AM in January is one of the worst ways to start a day — and in the Treasure Valley, where winter mornings can drop to 10–20°F, a marginal battery that gets by in September will often fail in December or January. Rogers Tire & Auto Care tests batteries free of charge, every day, no appointment needed. We use a digital conductance tester that measures actual battery health — state of charge, cranking capacity, and whether the battery is trending toward failure — not just whether it has voltage right now. A battery sitting at 12.4 volts can still be 30% of its rated capacity and fail on the next cold start.
If we find the battery is failing or below spec, we'll recommend replacement and quote it in writing. Battery replacement runs $180–$350 installed, depending on battery size, group number, and cold cranking amp rating for your vehicle. We install the right battery for your make, model, and climate — not the cheapest battery on the shelf that technically fits. Every battery installation includes terminal cleaning and service, and we check the charging system (alternator output voltage and load capacity) at the same time so you know the new battery is going into a healthy system.
Bring any vehicle in for a free battery test — no appointment, any time during business hours. We use a digital conductance tester that checks state of charge, cranking capacity (cold cranking amps tested vs. rated), and overall battery health. The tester gives a clear result: good, needs charging, replace soon, or replace now. If the battery tests good, we'll tell you — we don't recommend replacement on a battery that has years left in it. If it tests marginal, we'll tell you that too, and let you decide whether to replace now or monitor. If it's failing, we'll show you the numbers and quote replacement in writing.
A battery that's dead because it was left with lights on overnight may just need a full charge. A battery that's failing because its plates have sulfated or its cells are degraded can be charged, but it won't hold it — it'll fail again under load, usually at the worst possible moment. The conductance test tells us which situation we're dealing with. We'll charge a good battery that just ran down; we'll recommend replacement when the battery's internal structure has degraded. We don't recommend replacing batteries that don't need it.
Battery replacement isn't just 'put in whatever fits.' Every vehicle has a factory-specified group size, reserve capacity, and minimum cold cranking amp (CCA) rating — the number of amps a battery can deliver for 30 seconds at 0°F while maintaining at least 7.2 volts. A battery with too low a CCA rating for the vehicle may crank fine in September but fail in January. For Idaho winters, we install batteries that meet or exceed the OEM CCA spec — and for diesel trucks, we often recommend the higher of the two factory options, because diesel engines demand more from the electrical system.
Battery terminal corrosion — the white or blue-green buildup on the posts and cables — increases resistance in the circuit and can cause slow cranking, charging problems, and electrical faults that look like bigger issues. We clean and service the terminals at every battery replacement: wire brush the posts, clean the cable clamps, inspect the battery cables for fraying or damage, and apply anti-corrosion protection. This step is included with every battery installation at no extra charge. If the cable ends are severely corroded or damaged, we'll let you know — that's a separate repair.
If a battery keeps dying even though it tests fine and the charging system is good, the problem is a parasitic draw — something in the vehicle is pulling current when the ignition is off. Modern vehicles have some parasitic draw (computers in sleep mode, keyless entry modules, memory functions), but excessive draw can kill a battery overnight or over a weekend. We use an inductive ammeter to measure total draw and a fuse-pull method to isolate the circuit causing excess drain. Common causes include a glove box light that stays on, a trunk light stuck on, a failing relay, an aftermarket accessory wired improperly, or a module that fails to go to sleep.
Battery capacity drops significantly in cold weather: a battery that's at 80% health at 70°F may deliver only 50–60% of its rated CCA at 0°F. This is why batteries that seem marginal in October become unable to start a cold engine in January. The Treasure Valley's winter morning temperatures — regularly in the teens and low 20s, occasionally single digits — expose marginal batteries quickly. We recommend a free battery test every fall, before the first cold snap. If the battery is testing at 70% or below, replacing it before winter is far less disruptive than a January dead start.
$180–$350 installed, depending on battery group size and CCA rating. That price includes the battery, installation, terminal cleaning and service, and the charging system check. We quote in writing before ordering the battery. Free battery test with no obligation.
Most batteries last 3–5 years. Idaho's climate is moderately hard on batteries — the wide seasonal temperature swings stress cells more than a mild climate would. If your battery is approaching 4 years old, it's worth a free test. If it tests good, we'll tell you — if it's trending toward failure, you'll know before you get stranded.
Yes, we'll install a customer-supplied battery. Note that we can't warranty a battery we didn't supply, and we'll let you know if the battery you're bringing isn't the right spec for your vehicle. For most vehicles, our installed price is competitive with a store battery plus an installation fee — worth comparing.
On many modern vehicles, disconnecting the battery resets learned settings: radio presets, power window positions, throttle body calibration, automatic transmission shift points, and in some cases, the clock and trip computer. Most of these reset automatically after a short drive cycle. Some vehicles require a dealer or shop scan tool to register the new battery to the vehicle's power management system (common on BMW, Mercedes, and Audi). We handle this where required — let us know your vehicle and we'll confirm what's needed.
Probably. A battery that can't start the car on its own but recovers after a jump has likely reached the point where it can't deliver enough cranking amps to overcome the engine's starting load — especially in cold weather. The conductance test will tell us definitively. Bring it in for a free test while it's still running.
Either the charging system is not fully recharging the battery (failing alternator, broken belt, corroded connections), or there's a parasitic draw pulling current overnight. We test both — charging system output under load and parasitic draw with an ammeter. These are the two most common causes of a new battery repeatedly going dead.