No. A 12 v battery will actually have a charged peak voltage of 13.54v or 13.58v. A six volt charger will have around a max 7.5v voltage. The 6v charger will think the battery has peaked and will discontinue charging.
A: YES you can up to 6 volts but since the battery is a 12volts it will be not fully charged but sitting at 6 volts which makes it a worthless 12 volts battery. to charge a 12 volts battery the source must be at least 12 volts. Even though the battery sees 12 volts charging potential it must have a current limiter of a sort to charge it at manufacture specification otherwise it will get hot and eventually fail
No. The battery will be charged at a rate which is 2* the normal rate. This will cause the battery to overheat which might cause it to explode.
yes
No, the battery charger has to match the voltage of the battery it is to charge.
No.
Yes. The voltage of charger has to be slightly higher than the battery for it to be able to charge the battery.
No, a 12-volt charger cannot charge a 36-volt battery. The electrical potential difference across the leads of a charger must exceed the electrical potential difference across the terminals of any battery it is expected to charge. And 12 volts is much less than 36 volts.WHY?The 36-volt battery would require at least 39.3 volts to get to a float charge. This would charge the battery to 80% quickly, and then take a logarithmic period of time to finish the battery. To actually charge the 36-volt battery correctly would require roughly 43.2 volts, but if we can't get 39, this is irrelevant.The 12-volt charger has no chance.The answer above is correct; there is no way the 12-volt charger can charge a 36-volt battery. However, the voltages given apply only to lead-acid batteries. They would be different for nickel metal hydride or lithium cells. You still need a charger with more voltage that the battery voltage in any case.
You can charge a 12 volt battery with a 6 AMP charger. The amount of amps put out by the charger is actually the rate which the power flows out from the charger, not the amount of volts it will charge. Volts and Amps are two different things. You can't charge up a 12 volt battery all the way, using a 6 volt charger. You can charge a 12 volt battery with a 12 volt charger rated at '6 amps'. It will charge the battery faster than a 2 amp charger will, but it will take longer than using a 12 amp charger. You probably don't want to use anything higher than a 12-16 amp charger for charging a 12 volt battery. Some chargers are equipped with a 60amp boost charge that is used for starting the vehicle, without having much of a charge in the battery. You DO NOT want to attempt charging a battery with it set to a 60amp boost charge. That is for starting vehicles only and could damage your battery. Keep in mind that the lower the amps are, that you use to charge the battery (1-2amps), will result in the charge lasting longer without recharging it, than if it was charged up at a higher setting (12-16amps).
Charge it with a 12 volt battery charger.
No, a 12 volt charger will overcharge a 8 volt battery and destroy it.
A 12 volt battery charger is designed to charge 12 volt batteries.The answer to the Related Question explains how any battery charger works.
No, the battery charger has to match the voltage of the battery it is to charge.
If you are asking the question, can you charge a 6 volt battery with a 12 volt charger, the answer is no.
No.
no it can't
No it will not work
NoNo
No
No you cannot.
No, an automobile battery charger outputs 12 Volts. This is far too many volts to charge a 5 Volt battery. You would destroy the 5 Volt battery with this charger.