The difference is the amount of energy the charger will put into the battery over a given amount of time. A 2 amp charger is great to use to keep a battery charged when it is in storage. A 10 amp is used to recharge a battery in just a few hours. Always buy an automatic charger so you will never overcharge your battery.
Yes, the only difference is one will charge twice as fast as the other! -Dale
no do not try that,you risk possible melting or explosion,the charger will overpower the battery or cause the charger to fail and break
A .6 amp charger is a trickle charger. It would take days to charge a dead 12 volt battery with this charger. You need a 10 amp charger which will charge it in a couple of hours.
A battery charger that is outputting 1 amp or less is considered a trickle charger.
no, if you charge 9 volt battery with 12 volt battery you will destroy 9 volt battery
You can safely charge it with a 15 amp charger. You can also charge it with a 1 amp charger it will just take longer. Do not overcharge the battery.
Not at all. A 35 amp charger is far too large to charge a lawn mower battery. Use a 10 amp automatic charger.
Yes, only it will take the 1.2 amp a little longer to fully charge a battery than a 1.5 amp charger.
Yes. A battery draws what it needs from the charger, the charger does not force current into the battery. The voltage spec. is the same. Things would be different if you were to try to charge a five volt battery with a ten volt charger. You would probably blow the battery. Hope this helps.
There is no only one way to charge it and that is with a battery charger. A 15 amp battery charger will charge it about as fast as it needs to be charged.
Any 12 V battery charger will charge a motorcycle battery. But it is best to get one with low amperage such as a 4 to 6 amp battery charger. You can use a trickle charger to keep the battery charged on my motorcycle during storage.
12 volt 10 amp charger is what you need.