The lower the amperage, the deeper the charge, but also the longer it takes. Use the 2 amp if you have the time.
It depends on how long you can let it sit before you need to use it. If you have 8 to 10 hours then a setting of 2 amps is appropriate. For a quicker charge then 12 to 20 amps is recommended.
No because an ATV battery only can take 2 amps and a car charger pushes out 6 to ten But you can use a float charger there perfectly safe. it depends on your charger. most chargers have several amp settings to choose from. mine has settings for 2, 10, 25, 40, and 200 amps for jump starting. as long as you make sure the volts, 6 or 12, are right it will charge it.
Goodyear charges around 80 - 90$ depending on what kind of atv you use. More powerful atv's use better tires than smaller ones. So, if you have an average atv I would say around 85$ for the tires
From 5 to 15 amp charger.
Only if the voltage is the same (12v battery and 12v charge) and there is a lower amperage setting on the charger like around 10, maybe 30 but for small batteries 30 amps is a lot of current and they may get to be too hot warping plates, boiling acid away, and melting the case! 1200 amps... yeah, that's WAY too much. Don't use that setting!
If the device can be recharged it must have a rechargeable battery. Charging it at 2 amps instead of 3 amps would mean it takes 50% longer to charge.
You need to use an ammeter - usually the current setting on a multi-meter. The meter should be connected to the circuit in series.
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).
I went to the Orbitz website and seen where you need to register. They do not charge to use the site. As far as I can tell without setting up an account I don't see a charge.
Use a battery charger with a 2amp charge. Takes a few days. These small batteries don't like to be charged too fast with high amps.
No. The charger for a car battery has an output measured in amps. You have an output measured in milliamps. There are 1000 milliamps to 1 amp. Way too small.
charge the battery, change the battery, use the back up start either a pull start or kick start.