Yes, they need to be hooked in series for that. Connect the negative terminal of batt A to the positive terminal of batt B. The empty positive terminal of batt A will be +12V to the empty negative terminal of batt B. Be very carefull!
You can hook up an infinitive number of 12 volt batteries in a parallel circuit and still have 12 volts.
You must hook them up in series. You will need four 12 volt batteries to do this.
NO. Absolutely not, you must hook them in parallel. Two 12 volt batteries hooked in series will give you 24 volts with the same A/H of one of the batteries. Hook them in parallel and you will still have 12 volts and double the A/H of one of the batteries.
Two 6 volt batteries connected together in parallel will still maintain 6 volts but their amperage capacity will be doubled.
Yes, connect them in Parallel. You will still have 12 volts but the amperage will double which is fine.
You would need to connect the two 12 volt batteries in series. That will give you 24 volts and the amps of one of the batteries. Voltage doubles and amps stay the same.
To get 24 volts from two 12 volt batteries, hook the positive post from one battery to the negative post of the other.
You hook them in parallel pos to pos and neg to neg.
Hook then up in Series. Positive to negative. You then have 24 volts but the same amperage of one individual battery.that will short out other battery
Use a series parallel configuration. Two batteries in series to get the 12 volts. Three parallel banks of two batteries to get an increase of amp hours.
Connect two 6 volt batteries in series. Connect the other two 6 volt batteries in series. Now connect those 2 pairs you have together in parallel. You will end up with 12 volts.
Connect 2 of the 6 volt batteries in parallel and then connect the other 2 in parallel. Now connect those 2 pair in series to each other. You will now have a total of 12 volts with four 6 volt batteries connected in parallel/series. Click the link.