Posting this to help others who may want to remove their auxiliary battery to diagnose or prevent issues like voltage drops, no-start events after the truck sits, or similar problems.
What This Modification Achieves:
Note: Someone else performed this on a 2025 RAM 1500 RHO and reported the same success in removing the aux battery, but claimed it did not disable Auto Start-Stop. On my truck, it has not engaged Auto Start-Stop once under various conditions since the removal over a week ago—even with HVAC off, at operating temperature, and during drives over 30 minutes.
Instructions:
Technical Note on Fuse F52 (PCR CTRL FEED) & the ESS System (Auto Start Stop):
For those interested in the why, Fuse F52 is the control feed for the Power Control Relay (PCR). This relay is key to the Auto Start-Stop (ESS) system in dual-battery trucks.
*This is the same method used on numerous stellanits dual battery vehicles from 2018-2024 with the same results.
The Core Problem:
The small, low-capacity AUX battery is a known weak point. When it fails, it can drain the main battery because the system often keeps them connected in parallel when the vehicle is off. This is a frequent cause of the "dead battery after sitting" issues reported across forums.
The Common Solution:
The fix involves two steps:
What This Modification Achieves:
- Removes the auxiliary battery, which many suspect is a source of battery issues (voltage drops, no-starts, etc.). This battery primarily exists for the Auto Start-Stop function.
- Allows you to upgrade your main battery to a longer, higher-capacity H8 size (it bolts right in).
- Disables the Auto Start-Stop function.
- In my testing, this caused no error codes. I verified using an AutoAuth subscription and an XTOOL scanner capable of reading and clearing all modules.
Note: Someone else performed this on a 2025 RAM 1500 RHO and reported the same success in removing the aux battery, but claimed it did not disable Auto Start-Stop. On my truck, it has not engaged Auto Start-Stop once under various conditions since the removal over a week ago—even with HVAC off, at operating temperature, and during drives over 30 minutes.
Instructions:
- Disconnect and remove both batteries. Use a 10mm socket (nut on left side for main, right side for aux).
- Disconnect the N3 lead on the left side of the under-hood fuse box. This is connected to the positive cable running to the auxiliary battery.
- Pull the F52 10A (PCR CTRL FEED) fuse in the under-hood fuse box. This disables the system's monitoring of the auxiliary battery.
- Tape off or disconnect the negative cable that went to the auxiliary battery.
- Remove the small plastic spacer at the bottom of the battery tray (between the two battery compartments). This piece limits you to an H7 battery. Removing it and the Aux battery creates space for a longer H8 battery, which will secure using the OEM H7 battery holder. H8 batteries have more cold cranking amps and capacity as the H7 and are phyiscally longer.
- Re-install the main battery.
- Auto Start-Stop is disabled.
- Eliminates a known failure point—the small, problematic aux batteries that can fail and even drain the main battery when the truck sits.
- If your aux battery has failed, you save the cost of replacing it (~$150 USD /~$200 CAD).
- The modification is completely reversible.
- Bonus: You now have a spare 12V battery (the removed aux) for other projects.
Technical Note on Fuse F52 (PCR CTRL FEED) & the ESS System (Auto Start Stop):
For those interested in the why, Fuse F52 is the control feed for the Power Control Relay (PCR). This relay is key to the Auto Start-Stop (ESS) system in dual-battery trucks.
- The PCR is a normally closed relay. This means when it's not energized, the main and auxiliary batteries are connected in parallel (which is how a failed aux battery can drain the main).
- The system only energizes the PCR to open (separating the batteries) during two events: 1) for a moment at startup to test the aux battery, and 2) during an ESS event to isolate the electrical loads to the aux battery.
- By removing F52, you remove power from the PCR control circuit. This leaves the relay permanently closed. However, with the aux battery physically removed and its leads disconnected, the system cannot manage the ESS function, leading to its disabling the ESS Auto Start Stop system.
*This is the same method used on numerous stellanits dual battery vehicles from 2018-2024 with the same results.
Common Issue Across Stellantis Vehicles
The auxiliary (AUX) battery and Power Control Relay (PCR) system used in the 2025 Ram 1500 is not unique. It's a shared design across many Stellantis vehicles with Auto Start-Stop (ESS), including Jeep Wrangler JL, Jeep Gladiator, Dodge Durango, and Chrysler Pacifica. Owners of these models have reported identical problems and use virtually the same fix.The Core Problem:
The small, low-capacity AUX battery is a known weak point. When it fails, it can drain the main battery because the system often keeps them connected in parallel when the vehicle is off. This is a frequent cause of the "dead battery after sitting" issues reported across forums.
The Common Solution:
The fix involves two steps:
- Physically disconnecting or removing the AUX battery.
- Disabling the PCR control circuit to prevent the vehicle from looking for the missing battery and throwing errors.



