Chassis Context
The 2013 Winnebago View runs the NCV3 chassis with the OM642 3.0L V6 turbodiesel (188hp / 325 ft-lbs) and 7G-Tronic 7-speed automatic. The 2013 model year is part of the BlueTEC era — it has DEF/AdBlue injection, an SCR catalyst, and a DPF, all of which can trigger limp mode if they fault. The NCV3's SAM (Signal Acquisition Module) architecture and three-fuse-box layout are distinctive — many "electrical" faults on this chassis trace back to ground strap corrosion or SAM connector fatigue rather than failed components.
What's Specific to the 2013 Winnebago View
2013 saw minor running updates to the OM642 timing-case assembly that reduced balance-shaft gear wear risk compared to earlier years. If the Carfax shows no timing-case work, that's actually a somewhat better sign on a 2013 than on a 2007-2010. 2013 BlueTEC systems are mature enough to be predictable — DEF-related limp modes on this year almost always resolve with a sensor replacement rather than wholesale SCR work.
Common Symptoms
Battery Drain on the 2013 Winnebago View typically presents with one or more of these symptoms. The severity, frequency, and diagnostic steps vary significantly by chassis generation, which is why the causes below are written specifically for the NCV3 of the 2013 production year rather than generic "Sprinter" advice.
Likely Causes for the 2013 Winnebago View
For the 2013 Winnebago View specifically, the most common root causes involve parasitic draw from coach systems, the smart-start-stop module holding things awake too long (2014+), alternator undercharging on short-trip use, and coach batteries back-feeding through old isolator relays.
On the 2013 NCV3, the pre-smart-start-stop architecture means parasitic draws are more predictable than 2014+ builds. Focus on RV-side loads (fridge control board, inverter wake cycles, LPG detector, entertainment system), coach battery isolator relay condition, and the OEM aux-battery wiring harness. A 2013 in good repair should idle at under 75mA once the chassis modules fully go to sleep.
What to Do
Start by checking the most common causes listed above. For a step-by-step diagnosis specific to your symptoms, use our free AI Expert chat or the interactive diagnostic tool — both are trained specifically on Sprinter-based RVs and know the 2013 Winnebago View inside and out.
In-Depth Guides
Read our detailed troubleshooting articles on this topic:
Other 2013 Winnebago View Issues
Owners of the 2013 Winnebago View also commonly report these problems:
- DEF / AdBlue Warning
- DPF Regeneration Problems
- Generator Problems
- Heater Not Working
- Limp Mode
- Slide-Out Problems
Winnebago View Battery Drain by Year
This issue across other model years: 2010 · 2011 · 2012 · 2014 · 2015 · 2016