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What's the best source for a group 29NF battery?

Posted By 56_Fairlane 4 Years Ago
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paul2748
Posted 4 Years Ago
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I checked around late winter or early spring for the Ford battery and if I remember correctly found that it was not available anymore.  Any one have any info additional on this?

A bought a Ford battery two or three batteries ago and they had it down as a commercial battery


54 Victoria 312;  48 Ford Conv 302, 56 Bird 312
Forever Ford
Midland Park, NJ

DryLakesRacer
Posted 4 Years Ago
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I believe the batteries are listed as commercial is because they are part of the dual battery system in the diesel equipped E-350 Ford vans. The NAPA I have now replaced one I bought from Powertron 8 years ago but they no longer stock it. This sounds weird but the large diesel needed 2 batteries, the 29NF was all the would fit on one of the sides, and was not the same size or number the other one. 

56 Vic, B'Ville 200 MPH Club Member, So Cal.
56_Fairlane
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Yes, I checked around the Motorcraft battery has been discontinued. It's the trend at Ford to discontinue things on a lot of late model parts. I have a 2002 Excursion and a lot of Excursion specific parts are discontinued especially a lot of critical electrical parts.
I found a supplier of a Centennial batteries in Portland OR that has three of them. I've never heard of the brand but they offer a 1yr replacement / 30 mo prorated warranty. Only $100.76 plus core.


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1956 Ford Fairlane Town Sedan 30K original miles
Dobie
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"Yes, I checked around the Motorcraft battery has been discontinued. It's the trend at Ford to discontinue things on a lot of late model parts. I have a 2002 Excursion and a lot of Excursion specific parts are discontinued especially a lot of critical electrical parts."

Legally, manufacturers are obligated to supply service parts for 10 years after end of production of a given model. After that it's up to the aftermarket. The aftermarket looks at vehicle populations and decides which to support. As the population diminishes they adjust their parts production until a threshold is passed, then production ceases. Then it's the obsolete parts sellers or salvage parts unless and until a model achieves classic status and the classic/antique parts suppliers step in. Pure economics.
56_Fairlane
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I owned a few Mercedes in the past that were over 25 - 30 years old. I had no trouble finding OEM parts from the Mercedes dealer and a local German car part distributor. The parts were no more expensive than for a GM or Ford. OTOH Toyota parts are expensive!


~DJ~ AKA "Bleach"
1956 Ford Fairlane Town Sedan 30K original miles
Dobie
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The aftermarket as we know it doesn't exist much in Europe and not at all in Japan, thus European manufacturers supply parts for much longer periods. In Japan vehicles pretty much have to be scrapped when they reach a certain age; registration and insurance fees increase substantially making it uneconomical for a person to keep an old vehicle on the road. They must pass yearly and increasingly stringent safety and emissions inspections. Engines must be replaced at 5 years regardless. Keeps the manufacturers happy...


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