It gives the battery the ability to store energy over a long period of time.
A car battery is a wet cell. Only recently have dry cells been introduced, but your typical car battery is a wet lead storage battery.
Lead/acid, wet cell, electrical storage device.
The current produced by batteries is direct current. Electronic devices need direct current; in this case, they need a power supply (often built into the electronic device itself), that converts the alternating current, from the electric outlet, to direct current.
A lead-acid storage cell (which is what I assume you're talking about) should have, at minimum, the "Corrosive" label.
Of a storage device.
there are lots more amps in a car battery eg there about 1.5 in a flash light and in a car battery there about 300 A car battery is a wet cell battery and a flashlight battery is a dry cell battery.
Your question contains the answer. It is used to store electrical energy. This energy is used to start the car and run the engine and all electronics.
Can be a dead cell in the battery which will fully discharge the battery over night. The battery must be replaced. Of course any battery will loose it's charge over a few months of storage.
For certain repairs and storage, yes.
It is a battery which, as you may have guessed, used lead and an acid to store an electrical charge. Most car/truck batteries are of this type.
No, an automobile battery is a wet cell battery not a dry cell battery.
It is a battery which, as you may have guessed, used lead and an acid to store an electrical charge. Most car/truck batteries are of this type.