A Wire can be part of a battery substitute device such as that found at batsub.com.
I talked to an expert at Total Battery and he said "yes, you can substitute NiMh batteries instead of NiCad, and still use the same charger." I dug up one of my old dead NiCad AA batteries and it's the same voltage as the AA NiMh battery. Ray B.
No, you should not substitute muriatic acid for battery acid. Battery acid is typically sulfuric acid, which has different properties and concentrations than muriatic acid. Substituting one for the other can damage the battery and may be dangerous.
NO! Of course, my company makes 6135013408836 so I might be biased.
I will say no. I did install regular alkaline batteries and they died very soon and started to leak.
You can use very small paper towel pieces soaked in salt water. Trust me, this will work. I am currently using this for my battery-making science project.
mAh stands for milli ampere hour and it is a measurement of how many milli amps of current a battery is capable of producing in one hour. Yes you can substitute a battery with a higher mAh current rating provided you use the same battery voltage.
I did not locate a solar panel laptop itself, but there are solar panel laptop charger for the laptop battery. these will last many years and substitute for buying a laptop battery every year.
Batteries and chargers are matched to each other. You cannot arbitrarily choose a different battery or charger without running the risk of over or under charging, particularly with NiCad batteries, but also for any battery. Best is to consult the manufacturer and pick an exact replacement, or an authoirzed substitute.
Your battery could be discharged enough to not activate solenoid (clicking) If it's that dead, battery may be completely shot or problem with connections. If those look ok, substitute a known good battery to see if will start. If/when does, see if charging -use voltmeter at posts with car off and on-if charging voltage will be higher when running. If charging-buy a battery.
Maxell SR616SW: http://www.amazon.com/MAXELL-SR616SW-Silver-Oxide-Battery/dp/B000N56UEW A good alternative is the Energizer 321 1.55v
Yes you can. The battery supplies only as much current (amps) as the lamp draws when connected to 6 volts. The "12 amp" battery won't supply any more current when the lamp is shining than the "6 amp" battery did, but it'll last twice as long between charges.