ALBERTAN
Member


Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
You definitely have something way out of whack draining your battery - 2-3 days is NOT the norm. Do you have Mild to Wild on your exhaust? Do you keep your fob nearby? Are the inside lights staying on longer than 10-20 mins after you shut the doors? Any aftermarket electronics? Those are some simple things to check, although I don't think any of them would kill your battery that quick.
Try searching the forum, either on its search or using Google advanced search for only this site, for battery drain. I've seen others post about things causing power drain that you'd never imagine.
Insert a multi-meter in series with the battery to measure the current draw. Don't record the measurement until the RAP has timed out after twenty minutes or so. Once you're established the idle current draw, start removing fuses one at a time, until you see a reduction in current (Pull the RCDLR fuse first, since that's active while idle.) When the current drops, you've found the suspect circuit.
There are two fuse boxes too.
CC![]()
You should use a shunt in parallel with the meter to do this. Once any initial surge currents have dissipated, you can then open the shunt. (To make a shunt all you need is a parallel zero resistance electrical path). If you don't do this, you risk blowing the meter.
Can someone explain Mild2Wild I assume it increases exhaust sound with a power increase. How does this work, is it safe, how does everyone like it?
Can someone explain Mild2Wild I assume it increases exhaust sound with a power increase. How does this work, is it safe, how does everyone like it?
The initial connection is less than the 10 amps most meters will handle. I've done it many times without a shunt and have never blown the fuse in the meter. FWIW, my measured current is initially around 7 amps fluctuating for a few seconds, then goes down to about 4.33A. After a few minutes the parasitic drain stabilizes at about 17mA on my car with the Mild2Wild connected.
Fair enough. I haven't tried this on an XLR. On other automotive applications, I have seen much higher surges in that first instant.
I didn't notice anyone stating that you have to have a V to have wet or wild, the control module for the exhaust is in the trunk on left side while looking in the trunk under the floor mat. If you have a base model you don't have this option, a good exhaust system with headers would give you sound your looking for. I have many pictures in my profile to help making a connection without using wet & wild and just a toggle switch in my center console
VERY generic explanation: If you have a XLR-V, it comes stock with a variable mode exhaust that opens up exhaust baffles at around 3,000 rpm, increasing air flow, power & volume. The Mild2Wild lets you open or close the baffles any time you want by pushing a button. It's not something you can add to anything but the V with that particular exhaust (unless you go through a pretty involved process of retrofitting a V exhaust to a base).
MILD 2 WILD XLR Version
It provides wireless manual control of the vacuum operated muffler baffle on V models. I like mine and run in the open mode most all of the time. it is safe as it is no different than the factory operation except it is on all the time rather than just under a heavy foot at higher RPMs. There was some discussion about parasitic drain on the battery with the car off. I'm not so sure yet how much of an impact it has.
that is the best sounding xlr ever !!
wet and wild, alot more fun than the mild to wild version.
where can i buy this system![]()
I was thinking you may have been distracted by a movieTis the season to be jolly,I can't believe I called it wet & wild, good comeback though. I was thinking of that girl in the pool when I wrote that. These V's during rain are wet & wild though.
For those of you who did not already know, the instructions with the Mild-to-Wild, whaever mode you shut your engine off in is what the mild-to-wild stays in. If it was wired correctly, it would not matter whether it was left on or off. The add-a-circuit should have been placed in a location where the fuse has no power when the ignition is off.