It may be a bad battery, jump starting usually works by attempting to assist the battery, if the battery is no good, jump starting may not help. If it turns over (the engine) you can try holding down the gas while cranking, or spraying 'starter fluid' into the intake prior to cranking the engine. It may also be that the starter motor is bad, and therefore not able to turn the engine over. It may be unlikely, but the engine could be flooded as well.
Spark plugs not producing enough spark. Battery doesn't have enough charge. Old fuel.
if you put jumper cables on the wrong way you WILL kill the battery then if you leave them on you will cause the battery to overheat and swell then will u least expect it, it will blow up.. it will be a miniature hydrogen bomb
All we can say is that it is the nature of electrons to carry a negative charge, and for protons to carry a positive charge. The intrinsic cause of these charges is still not yet understood, and awaits the further development of sub-atomic physics models.
The current passed through them was too high. Possibly they are cheap cables, (many of them on the market today.) - Cables should be at least 10 gauge wire. Mine are 6. The thicker wire, the better quality your cables are. Anything thinner than 12 gauge is dangerous,.
Well to start with the question is a bit vague. A pulley has nothing to do with a start operation; a loose pulley may cause the belt not to turn fast enough to charge the battery and that's as far as it goes. Check your belt tension. If loose tighten it. That's All
Hard starting, corrosion at terminals, eventually cause a weak charge on the battery from cranking too much, will not start at all, can cause your carburetor to flood.
either it does not charge the battery enough or it will charge it too much which will quickly cause the electrolyte in the battery to evaporate
no cause there not bird
Yes. Without sufficient charge, the starter will not have enough amperage to crank.
Everything
Do you mean charge by the vehicle running....or do you mean take a charge from a Bench charger? if its in the vehicle it could mean that either the battery/battery connection/cables, a faulty ground, or the alternator is defective. If its on a bench charger then the battery has a dead cell or is defective and needs replacing.
The protons on Earth cause the charge separation in clouds. When these charges are powerful enough, the cloud's electricity is discharged toward the Earth's surface, causing lightning.
check your battery cables loose or dirty cables will cause this. if the problem persists check the reg/rectifier
No. More likely bad brushes or a bad internal regulator.
Your body can hold electric charge. When you touch something that can conduct electricity (or is at a different potential), the charge in you will travel. It sparks when you are close enough for the charge to travel through the remaining air gap.
Samsung and Nokia USB cables are not the same. My Samsung Galaxy S will charge fine with a genuine Samsung USB cable, but not with Nokia cables. I have tried two Nokia USB cables: Both of them cause the Samsung Galaxy S say it is charging but the battery voltage does not increase.
The best way to get a Jaguar XF out of valet mode would be to take it to the Jaguar dealer or an authorized Jaguar mechanic. As a rule it is generally frowned upon for one to try to work on their own Jaguar because it can cause more problem to arise.