It is important for solar battery charger output voltage to match voltage of battery system being charged. Voltage is additive in series circuits, therefore 3 12VDC solar battery chargers connected in series would provide correct output to charge a 36VDC system.
My guess is that it did not charge because mine did the same thing so it probably did not charge.
In battery technology, Float voltage is the constant voltage that is applied continuously to a voltaic cell under float operation. The voltage could be held constant for the entire duration of the cell's operation (such as in the SLI battery) or could be held for a particular phase of charging by the charger.
the regulator monitors battery or system voltage and adjusts current flow or magnetic field to the rotor. The magnetism of the rotor causes power to be generated in the stator. This supplies power to run the vehicle ands charge the battery. In other words the regulator adjusts the magnetic power required to make electricity. In operation it keeps vehicle system voltage to between 14.0 to 14.7 volts.
Your battery-powered flashlight is a good example of a DC series circuit. Battery power is DC. The battery is connected to a wire or piece of metal that's connected to a switch that is connected to an incandescent light bulb (resistor/thermistor) which is then connected to another piece of metal or wire which is connected to usually a spring in the end of the flashlight which creates a ground to the negative terminal of the battery.
System Crash - TV series - ended in 2002.
No.
A 10 amp charge will only output 10 amps and 12 volts. So, if you want to charge thee 12 volt batteries hooked in series you will have to disconnect the positive cable from each battery and charge then individually. You cannot charge three 12 volt batteries hooked in series. That requires a 36 volt charger.
Your S3 mini battery won't charge because your charger is faulty or because your charging system is faulty.
Not on any modern car with a 12 volt system.
With a 12 volt battery charger that is made to plug into a 220 volt circuit.
Some car battery charges will not charge a completely dead battery. You need to find a type of battery charger that is designed to charge a completely dead battery. You can get around this by hooking a car with a working battery up to the dead battery with jumper cables. The alternator/charging system of the car with the good battery will charge the dead battery. Leave them connected for about 30 min, then disconnect and try to use the battery charger again. If it still won't charge, hook it up to the car with the good battery for a longer period of time.
Some have a switch for 6 or 12V - if not you will "cook" a 6 volt battery using a 12 Volt charger
The onboard battery charger is located beneath the electronics tray.You simply plug it into a wall outlet.Any other method is not advised as a car charger will damage the system.
Not in parallel NO - unless each charger is twice the voltage required for a single battery. For example if you had 2 x 12V batteries and placed the in series, you would have a 24V battery. If you had two 12v chargers and put then in PARALLEL with each other, you would then have a 12v charger with double the current handling. Of course if the chargers were 24v ones, then it would work fine. if you have 2 x 12v batteries (for example) and wished to charge them with separate chargers (actually quite a good idea), then each charger would be over each battery. So the batteries would be in series, the chargers would also effectively be in series too. Basically another way of looking at it would be two have a 12v battery with a 12v charger to your left and then on the right another 12v battery with a 12v charger on it. Yes you can connect the two together in series. The only slight caveat is that the chargers must be isolated from each other - and not for example a "dual output charger" which simply has an extra pair of leads but a shared charging system. - 12v + - 12v + ---------+-BATTERY---+----------+--BATTERY--+-------- - | |+ - | | + |=CHARGER=| |=CHARGER=| - <------------------------------- 24 v ----------------------------> +
Separate the 2 12 volt batteries and charge them individually.
yea you can the battery just takes longer to charge. i wouldn't recommend doing it on a regular basis though because it can mess up your battery
there are several ways you could get a charger to shut off, most of them use a circuit that detects when the draw amps get low indicating the battery has full charge. when the battery fills with electrons a back pressure or resistance goes up