reeac
Well-Known Member
Most articles about jump starting refer to the use of jump cables in a car to car situation. I've done a bit of that myself in the past. I'm a bit puzzled about the use of a battery pack though as although I owned one as a precautionary measure for some years I never had to use it and finally it refused to accept charge and so I junked it - a replacement battery seemed to cost as much as a complete pack. I see from reading the user instructions for a Clarke 5 in 1 model that you need to wait two minutes after connecting the pack in parallel before trying to start the engine. To me this is counter-intuitive as I fear that the 18 Ah jump battery would lose all its charge into the flattened 180 Ah boat batteries. If this is likely to happen then my instinct would be to operate the starter immediately after connecting the battery while the jump battery has most of its charge available. The only justification for the two minute delay might be if there is an immediate creation of surface charge within the flattened boat batteries which could give a useful boost to their output voltage. Anyone any practical experience of this situation? Is such a delay advantageous? Would it be better to boost one of the two boat batteries?