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Get a working vehicle. Bring it to the disabled vehicle
Jump Your Battery Step
Verify that both the dead battery and the rescue battery have the "same" voltage. Car batteries are usually twelve Volts. Trucks/tractors may operate on a twenty-four volt system, sometimes two twelve volt batteries combined to make a twenty-four volt system. Do not attach 12V to 24V.
Jump Your Battery Step
Position the vehicles so that the car batteries are close enough to each other for your jumper cables to reach each one. Make sure the cars are not touching.
Jump Your Battery Step
Turn off both engines. Open the hood of each of the cars.
Jump Your Battery Step
Turn off the headlights, wipers, radios, and all accessories on both cars. Unplug anything charging in the cigarette lighter. They waste power and might even be damaged by surges of power.
Jump Your Battery Step
Untangle and unwind the jumper cables. The jaws of the cable clamps are designed to bite into the soft metal of the battery clamps that are attached to the battery terminal posts. Don't attach negative to positive so do not attach in "series." That may damage the electronics.
Jump Your Battery Step
Visually check both batteries for cracks, leaks, and damage. If any of these exist, stop. Call a tow truck, do not attempt to jump the car, do not even connect the cables.
Jump Your Battery Step
Connect a red clamp "first" to the positive (+) post on the dead battery. Then connect the other end with the red clamp to the positive (+) post on the good battery.
Jump Your Battery Step
Connect a black clamp to the negative (-) post of the good battery.
Jump Your Battery Step
Connect the only remaining clamp (a black clamp for the car with the dead battery) to a solid piece of unpainted, grounded metal on the dead car. Avoid connecting this clamp to the negative post of the dead battery—do this only as a last resort. (See tips for
suggestions on what metal parts to clamp to.)
Jump Your Battery Step
Start the working vehicle so it can be charging its own battery and the dead one.
Jump Your Battery Step
Let it idle for approximately five minutes before trying to start the other car. Never race the engine. If a "fast" idle is not enough to charge the dead battery then it's not going to charge.
Jump Your Battery Step
Try to start the disabled vehicle. If it doesn't start, wait another five minutes for a little more charging, and try again. Repeat until the disabled vehicle starts.
Jump Your Battery Step
Remove the jumper cables from the vehicles in the reverse order from when you attached them (so remove the clamp from the ground of the recently disabled vehicle, black and red from the good battery and finally the red from the formerly dead battery.)
Jump Your Battery Step
Keep the recently disabled vehicle engine running a little above idle for at least twenty minutes to charge the batterery
Tips
Look at your jumper cables. Many will have instructions with pictures explaining the order to attach the clamps.
Don't connect the black leads first and the red leads afterward: If you would do that and accidentally drop the red cable onto the car's frame, a massive short-circuit will form, possibly welding the clamp to the chassis.
Remember that batteries are not always in the same place. Some vehicles have the battery under the hood, some behind the cab, and some are even in the trunk.
Don't let the working vehicle leave for at least ten minutes. The dead battery must charge for a while, and sometimes the charging car will knock off and need another jump (especially if you do not keep the engine above idle).
When looking for a good ground for that last clamp, look for shiny metal around or on the engine. Painted, oily, or rusted metal will not work. Nuts, bolts, or other protruding shiny metal is best. There may be some sparking when you connect to a good ground. It's strongly recommended not to clip the last clamp to the dead battery (which would be an obvious choice) as the sparks that may fly when you complete the electrical circuit could
ignite the hydrogen gas coming off the battery.
Do not use cheap jumper cables with thin wire. Use good heavy-duty jumper cables.
Use safety: if goggles or gloves are available, put them on now. Have anyone not wearing safety equipment stand clear of both vehicles.
It may be necessary to remove the disabled automobile battery cables from the battery terminals and clean both the connectors and the terminals. Use a stiff wire brush to remove all corrosion. Reconnect the cables to the battery terminals try jumping the car again.
Some car manufacturers have designated jump start connectors located somewhere other than the actual battery, a red connection place for positive and a bolt sticking out of the frame nearby which is unpainted and is used for the negative ground connection. Presumably this is to lessen the risk of accidental battery gas ignition and less trouble than finding the actual battery buried beneath the plastic engine covers that some modern vehicles have.