Four to seven years. Whether the car has an automatic transmission or a manual transmission, it makes no difference to the battery's life.
What affects the life of the battery is heat (if the car originally had a battery heat shield, be sure it's back on) vibration (make sure you have a battery hold-down keeping iy tight in place) parasitic loads (keep the battery terminals clean), and number of charge cycles (many short trips will give you fewer years of use than fewer long trips), and electrical load upon starting (keeping car well-maintained, clean oil, ground connections clean and tight helps reduce the starter's load on a battery).
Depends on the car, some cars can drift with automatic.
Car battery life varies depending on quality, but is normally specified by the manufacturer on the battery itself at the time of purchase. Some cars also indicate the battery level on the dashboard.
Really depends on the car, there are great offroad cars with automatic.
The battery should last as long as the lifetime of the car according to 2 Hybrid car manufactures, but with the cars not being around for very long, nobody really knows the answer to this question.
Several car companies are currently producing automatic cars within the next few years. Automatic cars are expected to roll into driveways as early as 2014.
It will drain the battery in the short term,but in the long term battery life really isn't effected.
Sure, many automatic cars already have a tach.
"Motor cars are a lot more powerful in terms of speed and fuel life. However, a hybrid car's battery is electrical which makes the car life regenerative."
automatic windows
cause if your car went automatic then you could not control it
In most cars the battery is in front of the engine. In some cars, it is beneath the truck sometimes with the spare tire.
If it is an automatic charger let it charge until the charger shuts off.