I wascontemplating picking up a jump/boost battery pack until I read it's for lead acid batteries only. My bike has a lithium battery so I was wondering if there is anything safe to use for lithium?
I would get a trickle charger that is specifically meant for lithium batteries.I wascontemplating picking up a jump/boost battery pack until I read it's for lead acid batteries only. My bike has a lithium battery so I was wondering if there is anything safe to use for lithium?
I wascontemplating picking up a jump/boost battery pack until I read it's for lead acid batteries only. My bike has a lithium battery so I was wondering if there is anything safe to use for lithium?
For boosting a vehicle's charging system in an emergency, it will work fine.
I would get a trickle charger that is specifically meant for lithium batteries.
The anti gravity battery in my SV died, turned into a $120 paperweight
I wascontemplating picking up a jump/boost battery pack until I read it's for lead acid batteries only. My bike has a lithium battery so I was wondering if there is anything safe to use for lithium?
Side note that all batteries are dangerous but if you are faced with an unavoidable catastrophic lithium battery failure or fire, whatever you do don't breathe or physically contact the smoke or precipitant and don't try to put out a lithium fire with water. The gasses being released include hydrogen fluoride and with the addition of water that produces hydrofluoric acid which is toxic. The human body being comprised largely of water doesn't fair well with direct exposure to hydrogen fluoride.
Side note that all batteries are dangerous but if you are faced with an unavoidable catastrophic lithium battery failure or fire, whatever you do don't breathe or physically contact the smoke or precipitant and don't try to put out a lithium fire with water. The gasses being released include hydrogen fluoride and with the addition of water that produces hydrofluoric acid which is toxic. The human body being comprised largely of water doesn't fair well with direct exposure to hydrogen fluoride.
I wonder if the battery even had a charge in it?I just had a shipment rejected by Canada Post and returned to Germany because apparently they don't accept incoming international shipments that contain batteries. It's now on its way back with Fedex. Very strange but my guess would be it was related to potential fire risk. The battery in this item shouldn't be much bigger than a tablet battery. Eeediots.
I believe the original poster is talking about one of those portable booster-pack "start your car in an emergency" battery packs, something like this one https://www.amazon.ca/STANLEY-J309-...ocphy=1002216&hvtargid=pla-450176757048&psc=1
It has its own built-in battery charger (plugs into a wall outlet) and does not rely upon the vehicle's charging system. For boosting a vehicle's charging system in an emergency, it will work fine.