Anonymous Poster
Epic Contributor
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2005
- Messages
- 29,678
Gary, I've encountered this exact situation myself, twice.
One time it was a frozen dead battery on a tractor. When I hit the switch on the startall the tractor started about half a second before the battery EXPLODED. I was very happy the Startall had 18' cables.
The second time I encountered the situation, the battery being jumped had an internal short ( one cell had collapsed) and effectively became an electric heater, absorbing all available current coming thru the jumpers. In that case, it was a standby generator that was needed immediately, so I pulled the + cable from the genset and started the machine using the battry at the end of the jumpers to get and keep the genset running.
I've learned a number of expensive lessons over the years about jump starting.
First, always disconnect the alternator on the running vehicle doing the jumping. This prevents alternator damage when powering a large vehicle from a smaller one. A 580 Case will destroy the alternator in a Duster when the 580 comes to life.
Second, always check the electrolyte in the battery that is being jumped, low or frozen electrolyte will cause BIG problems.
Third, Hook up to the dead vehicle first, then +, and finally frame (not battery post) on the jumping vehicle.
Test your connection by pulling the headlights on (dead vehicle). No lights indicate either a bad connection, or dangerous situation.
Turn headlights off, and allow dead battery to charge for a minute before trying to start.
Jumping a dead battery is always a dangerous situation. If the battery has an internal defect, you are creating Hydrogen Gas in a container where a spark may occurr, as well as steam. That's exactly what happened in a place called Chernobyl about 20 years ago, and while yor results may be smaller, they won't be any less devistating if you're standing next to the dead battery.
One time it was a frozen dead battery on a tractor. When I hit the switch on the startall the tractor started about half a second before the battery EXPLODED. I was very happy the Startall had 18' cables.
The second time I encountered the situation, the battery being jumped had an internal short ( one cell had collapsed) and effectively became an electric heater, absorbing all available current coming thru the jumpers. In that case, it was a standby generator that was needed immediately, so I pulled the + cable from the genset and started the machine using the battry at the end of the jumpers to get and keep the genset running.
I've learned a number of expensive lessons over the years about jump starting.
First, always disconnect the alternator on the running vehicle doing the jumping. This prevents alternator damage when powering a large vehicle from a smaller one. A 580 Case will destroy the alternator in a Duster when the 580 comes to life.
Second, always check the electrolyte in the battery that is being jumped, low or frozen electrolyte will cause BIG problems.
Third, Hook up to the dead vehicle first, then +, and finally frame (not battery post) on the jumping vehicle.
Test your connection by pulling the headlights on (dead vehicle). No lights indicate either a bad connection, or dangerous situation.
Turn headlights off, and allow dead battery to charge for a minute before trying to start.
Jumping a dead battery is always a dangerous situation. If the battery has an internal defect, you are creating Hydrogen Gas in a container where a spark may occurr, as well as steam. That's exactly what happened in a place called Chernobyl about 20 years ago, and while yor results may be smaller, they won't be any less devistating if you're standing next to the dead battery.