Yes it is.
If you jump a car or other vehicle with a 6 volt electrical system using a 12 volt battery, you can blow out the 6 volt battery. When they are connected, it usually only takes a fraction of a second to start the six volt system. There should be a person ready to start the 6 volt system immediately if not sooner so the 12 volt system can be disconnected immediately before the battery overheats and burns out.
12 volt
Yes, if you have a 12 volt battery and/or a charging system to support it.
no it has a stator charging system that uses a rectifier & volt regulator.
12.5 - 14 volt
If the light stays on it indicates your charging system has malfunctioned. Usually this means the alternator has failed, but not always.
Sounds like it is not charging, have the charging system tested, it may be the alternator at fault.
Wrong question, it depends on the charger, not the golf cart.
Sounds like the alternator is going bad, Need to check charging system with a volt meter.
with the vehicle running, take a volt meter turned to measure volts and place one lead on each battery post; if the charging system is operating properly, the voltmeter should read between 14 and 15 volts
Assuming the engine is running, and the charging system is in good condition. The volt drop should be almost zero. Possibilities of volt drop include. Bad earth to the component. Bad chassis earth. Bad charging system component. Bad wiring. Seized component making the alternator work harder and cutting down the voltage.
No