Sounds like a short on one of the battery cells. Get the local tyre and battery shop to check the battery out
It would depend on the condition of the battery and if the battery charger has a jump start mode.
I would not I would buy a 12 volt charger and plug it in for a day
It should work very well with a few limitations. If you try to start your car from a flat battery connected to a battery charger, then this would in general mean that you try to start your car with the charger unit. A charger unit can in most cases not deliver more than 6-10 Ampere at most. To start the car, you would need 50-100 Ampere, something a normal charger can not give. Likewise, if you turn on the headlights, these drain approx 55-75 Watt each. Depending on connected charger, the headlights could drain more power than the charger is capable of, and you would still be running the battery down, just not as fast as you would without the charger attached. If you play music in the car whilst being in your own garage doing repairs or cleaning or any other work, then it is a good idea to attach a charger to the battery first. This would ensure max capacity when you go out for a drive since you will basically only use the power from the charger when playing music.
The battery is dead - you would need to boost the vehicle in order for it to start , but once you shut the vehicle off it will not start again without boosting or hooking it up to a battery charger
Cause a no start situation.
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.
a trickle charger will not jump start anything,however if it is left connected long enuff, and the battery will take a charge, the mower should start. to jumpstart, a mower, you can use a car the same as you would jump start another car. just make sure battery in mower is 12 volt same as car
Sounds like the starter relay or solenoid is stuck. Check the selenoid - the selenoid might be stuck closed which would cause the starter to turn because the power wouldn't be shut off from the battery. Or it may be the ignition switch is stuck in the start position.
I would start with your battery.
bad battery or loose battery cable
Yes
If your battery is dead then you are going nowhere therefore why would you need to take the car out of park? Get a jump start from another car with a good battery and then you can start your car and drive to the nearest battery dealer and buy a new battery if need be. Otherwise just put a battery charger on your battery and let it fully charge.