tallyho8
Elite Member
- Joined
- Aug 1, 2004
- Messages
- 4,530
- Tractor
- Kubota L4400, Kubota ZD326
My wife and I like to use an old junky golf cart around the place to bring feed to the horses, put out the garbage, repair fence lines, etc. It seems like everytime I am on the back pasture with it, she needs to use it, so we decided to become a 2 golf cart family. 
The golf course up the road retires their old carts when they get too beat up to use anymore and sells the best ones and if some are too bad for anyone to want they give them away. I went and got one.
It didn't have any battery charger or batteries and the brackets that hold in a couple of the batteries were completely rusted away. It had a few dents and dings which was good because I always feel bad when I put the first ding in a piece of equipment and the way we use these around the barn they get messed up quick.
Now I had to figure how to get it running cheap and quick. Six new 6 volt batteries cost $500 which is too much to put into an old cart. But the two batteries in my Ford diesel pickup were 3 years old and the one in my Ranger was 3 years old so it was time to replace them anyway. I hate to be stranded somewhere with a dead battery so I change them before they go bad. So, I bought 3 new batteries for my trucks and put the 3 old 12 volt batteries in my cart.
That way I didn't have to fix the two rusted out battery brackets because I didn't even use them. I use the battery charger for my first cart on this one too and I only charge the battery about twice a week.
This one is about 200 pounds lighter than my one with 6 batteries in it so it is a lot faster. I know that six 6 volt batteries hold a charge a lot longer than three 12 volt one but I've had it a couple of weeks now and used it quite a lot for a couple days in a row without the batteries going dead. If I have to charge it every 3 days instead of every 4 or 5 days it is no big deal.
It's not the kind of cart I would bring to a Sunday School picnic but the best part about it is, IT WAS FREE!
The golf course up the road retires their old carts when they get too beat up to use anymore and sells the best ones and if some are too bad for anyone to want they give them away. I went and got one.
It didn't have any battery charger or batteries and the brackets that hold in a couple of the batteries were completely rusted away. It had a few dents and dings which was good because I always feel bad when I put the first ding in a piece of equipment and the way we use these around the barn they get messed up quick.
Now I had to figure how to get it running cheap and quick. Six new 6 volt batteries cost $500 which is too much to put into an old cart. But the two batteries in my Ford diesel pickup were 3 years old and the one in my Ranger was 3 years old so it was time to replace them anyway. I hate to be stranded somewhere with a dead battery so I change them before they go bad. So, I bought 3 new batteries for my trucks and put the 3 old 12 volt batteries in my cart.
That way I didn't have to fix the two rusted out battery brackets because I didn't even use them. I use the battery charger for my first cart on this one too and I only charge the battery about twice a week.
This one is about 200 pounds lighter than my one with 6 batteries in it so it is a lot faster. I know that six 6 volt batteries hold a charge a lot longer than three 12 volt one but I've had it a couple of weeks now and used it quite a lot for a couple days in a row without the batteries going dead. If I have to charge it every 3 days instead of every 4 or 5 days it is no big deal.
It's not the kind of cart I would bring to a Sunday School picnic but the best part about it is, IT WAS FREE!