aighead
Senior Member
What? Now you're telling me I shouldn't be trickle charging? Oh boy.
I will try to post some pictures of it. I have never posted pictures some I'll have to figure that out. Just hang on it may be alittle till I can.Do you have any pictures of your jump cart? I completely understand what you are using it for. I've been to a local auto auction and they have a golf cart sized vehicle with a jump pack system built in to the back of it. They drive right down the row of cars, jumping any of them that won't crank on their own. I'm not sure how they charge their batteries, maybe off the golf cart engine? I didn't look that closely
Thanks for giving a lot of people the idea of how to build.
I have that much in it without counting much time to build it. The poor man's version of a engine driven Goodall jumpstarter.If something like that was sold in specialty stores like truck shops it would sell for $3,000 plus. It would be a good jumper for auctions or fleets.
I didn't say they weren't useful, if I had to crank over 30 seconds on 6-10 machines on a weekly basis, I'd definitely have something like is shown. But, I'm not going to carry a cart around in my service truck.Sometimes you need to get multiple machines going in freezing temps so need something extra heavy duty.
Ya, sorry I derailed it. The small jump pack I use is a MAC. I think the same as a JNC. It works ok if I keep it charged up. Thought about getting a NOCO one and trying that. It may have more power than the MAC but not a pricey as the Goodall.Good grief, guys. This thread was about jump packs, not something to start a locomotive.