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The fluid in an automotive battery is sulfuric acid.
Helps the battery to hold charge for a long period of time by charging the cells of the battery. So always check if you need to top off the battery acid fluid in your battery if its not servicable battery then you cant really check it you will need a special tool that you hook up to it that will read for you if battery still has good or bad charge.
Battery fluid in common auto batteries is sulfuric acid possibly with some additives.
Six mL is about 0.202 US fluid ounces.
Batteries use acid to derive electricity, and this acid is known as battery fluid or 'juice'. Which acid any certain battery contains depends on who made it, why, and what technology was available. The related Wikipedia link offers an extensive list of battery types.
It depends on what the 6 cells are, but the battery voltage is just 6 times the cell voltage. In a car battery (lead-acid cells) - 12V In a dry-battery (zinc-carbon cells) - 9V
The fluid in the battery is around 65% distilled water and 35% sulfuric acid.
The fluid in a battery, sulfuric acid and water, has a ph around 1.
The cells in the battery are in a liquid (sulfuric acid).
AnswerAccording to WikiPedia (http:/en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rechargeable_battery), the nominal cell voltage of a Lead Acid wet-cell battery is 2.1 volts, this implies there are 6 cells in a 12 volt Lead Acid wet-cell battery.
Lead acid
Cells in a normal car 12v battery are composed of lead and sulfuric acid.