
 Originally Posted by 
drivesafe
					
				 
				I'm not going round and round in circles with you.
When trying to jump start a vehicle, your are NOT trying to charge a flat/faulty battery.
Your aim is to get a SURFACE CHARGE in that flat and or faulty battery and all lead acid batteries will take a surface charge, regardless of their state of charge or lack of any charge.
The vehicle will then be started primarily by the surface charge in the flat/faulty battery, assisted by the charge coming through the standard jumper leads.
The vehicle can then be safely started using jumper cables as thin as 8B&S ( which is the common size of elcheapo jumper leads ).
Again, there is no need to carry huge jumper leads if you know how to correctly carry out a jump start.
Furthermore, using the correct way to jump start a vehicle also protects the donor vehicle's battery.
This is also why all owners manuals state to leave the donor vehicle connect with it's motor running for a few minutes, BEFORE you attempt to start the crippled vehicle's motor.
			
		 
	 
 
Oh man.   YOur not getting what I'm saying.  When a lot of modern batteries die.  There is no surface charge.  They won't even light up the dash lights.   If you try to charge them, the battery gets swollen and hot .... and still will not hold any voltage.  Even after 12hours on my big transformer charger they will not illuminate even the dash lights.   When the batteries die in this manner.  The only way to start the car is big jumper leads or a new battery.  I've seen this quite a few times.
20years ago ... batteries used to get tired .... and you could jump start them easily ... charge them easily but the capacity would be down.  These days the modern batteries can internally short ... they just don't hold ***any*** charge.  I've got one sitting the shed out of my '63 ID19 if you don't believe me.  It expired as described above sitting in a car with the battery terminal off.
				
			 
			
		 
			
				
			
			
				Proper cars--
'92 Range Rover 3.8V8 ...  5spd manual
'85 Series II CX2500 GTi Turbo I :burnrubber:
'63 ID19 x 2  :wheelchair:
'72 DS21 ie 5spd pallas 
Modern Junk:
'07 Poogoe 407 HDi 6spd manual  :zzz:
'11 Poogoe RCZ  HDI 6spd manual
			
			
		 
	
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