A battery charger can be used to test a battery if the charger includes a voltmeter, so you can read off the voltage.
Note: A battery charger is designed to be used only for rechargeable batteries.
It can be very dangerous to try to use a battery charger to test or recharge normal non-rechargeable batteries.
The battery for US and UK is the same but the different is the battery charger You should get a UK charger for you battery.
Hook up a battery charger to it.
It depends on the charger. The one I have, all you do is hook up the red clamp to the red pole on the battery, the black clamp to the black pole, then plug the charger in to an outlet. The charger has a gauge on it that tell you when the battery is fully charged. I don't know where to hook the charger
Probably. The alternator and voltage regulator may be fried, and the battery ruined. Take the battery to a battery shop and have them test it.
It is not advisable to leave a trickle charger on your battery when starting the vehicle.
The charger can test the % left in the battery and the voltage remaining. It can also test a car's alternator.
the battery charger and the charger are the same thing. the charger charges the battery and the laptop runs off the power from the battery. hope this helps
You cannot compare these two totally different things. As far as amperage the charger puts out more amps if it is an auto battery charger and also puts out 12 volts. If you are talking about a 9 volt battery charger then the battery may or may not be more powerful, it depends on how many mii-amps the charger is putting out.
sure, you can buy a battery charger that will charge any car battery.
Any car charger will do. I recommend that you use a trickle charger rather than a jump charger. Also, look into a Battery Tender which will not only charge your battery at a proper pace, but you can leave it plugged in an the Battery Tender will maintain your battery for you so that it never becomes low again.
Not that i can think of where you'd find a charger labeled for a 7.5 V battery, but - No. A charger rated for a higher voltages won't know when to turn off, and if it's also pushing a higher charge current it's likely to overheat the battery.
No, an unplugged battery charger will not cause a battery to discharge.
It is called a battery charger.
It is a battery charger that can be used to start the vehicle. It has a special setting on the charger for that purpose.
Immediate charger is a charger that can charge battery immediately. Strong battery is a battery that can live much longer than normal battery and have unlimited data.
You can hook the battery charger to the battery in the trunk, or to the jump start posts under the hood.
Most good battery chargers are automatic and will stop charging when the battery is fully charged. But if the charger is a manual charger it can overcharge the battery. With this type charger it is up to you to remove the charger when the battery is fully charged. Normally this is based on the amount of time the charger takes to charge the battery pack. Operators manual will list the time.