I have always been nervous about jump starting a car battery - mine or anybody else'. And the reason has been that the instructions always said, connect the positive leads of the drained and the running batteries, but the negative lead on the drained battery end should not be connected to the battery itself, but to some other metal part. Not knowing the science behind that, I'd worry about choosing a wrong 'metal part' and something blowing up. (Yeah, I got good imagination
!)
The other problem is, it has not always worked for me. Before, I used to think it was operator error. But now I am wondering.
Two months ago, my RAV4 needed a jump start. I tried using my wife's Corolla, but the jump did not work - the RAV4 coughed, spluttered and knocked, but that's it. I was about to move the negative lead to the battery itself (instead of the metal frame) when my neighbor drove up with his truck and jumped it for me from his battery. Huh, I thought - maybe the Corolla's battery is not strong enough? (It's new enough - the car itself is just a year old).
Yesterday I come out of a bank and a young lady calls out to me from her car to ask if I had jump cables. I do, so I offer to hook it up. (For whatever reason she's already barely holding back tears; maybe because her large dog in the back is panting away to glory, maybe she's having a bad day, but that's not the story).
Anyway - the jumping does not work. When she tries to start, the same thing happens - it coughs, splutters and knocks, but nothing further. I tell her that I suspect my batteries themselves are weak, or maybe need replacing, who knows? I apologize, pack up my cables and say bye. By now she's on the phone pleading with her boyfriend to come over and he's presumably refusing because she actually starts crying and all.
So I now think, what the heck, lemme try out my theory - and I reconnect the cables, this time negative to negative on the batteries, and ask her to try again. And voila! It starts rightaway!
She's relieved and even happy; though maybe she could have spent a tad more than that fraction of a second to thank me, but she was still on the phone yelling/upset at her guy, and maybe she grew up on the 'you are special' diet that fills one up with a sense of entitlement. But again, that's not the story.
Anyway, I am relieved, and sorta triumphant that I did not blow up anything and the jump worked. Is this because my battery is not strong enough to cause damage? Remember, I was using the RAV4 this time, different from the Corolla battery that also did not work when not connected to the negative lead.
I feel I'm justified to straightaway connect the positive and negative leads next time. Any comments on if that'd be inadvisable?
!)The other problem is, it has not always worked for me. Before, I used to think it was operator error. But now I am wondering.
Two months ago, my RAV4 needed a jump start. I tried using my wife's Corolla, but the jump did not work - the RAV4 coughed, spluttered and knocked, but that's it. I was about to move the negative lead to the battery itself (instead of the metal frame) when my neighbor drove up with his truck and jumped it for me from his battery. Huh, I thought - maybe the Corolla's battery is not strong enough? (It's new enough - the car itself is just a year old).
Yesterday I come out of a bank and a young lady calls out to me from her car to ask if I had jump cables. I do, so I offer to hook it up. (For whatever reason she's already barely holding back tears; maybe because her large dog in the back is panting away to glory, maybe she's having a bad day, but that's not the story).
Anyway - the jumping does not work. When she tries to start, the same thing happens - it coughs, splutters and knocks, but nothing further. I tell her that I suspect my batteries themselves are weak, or maybe need replacing, who knows? I apologize, pack up my cables and say bye. By now she's on the phone pleading with her boyfriend to come over and he's presumably refusing because she actually starts crying and all.
So I now think, what the heck, lemme try out my theory - and I reconnect the cables, this time negative to negative on the batteries, and ask her to try again. And voila! It starts rightaway!
She's relieved and even happy; though maybe she could have spent a tad more than that fraction of a second to thank me, but she was still on the phone yelling/upset at her guy, and maybe she grew up on the 'you are special' diet that fills one up with a sense of entitlement. But again, that's not the story.
Anyway, I am relieved, and sorta triumphant that I did not blow up anything and the jump worked. Is this because my battery is not strong enough to cause damage? Remember, I was using the RAV4 this time, different from the Corolla battery that also did not work when not connected to the negative lead.
I feel I'm justified to straightaway connect the positive and negative leads next time. Any comments on if that'd be inadvisable?

LCHIEN
Loring in Katy, TX USA
so I was being a good husband.) After it didn't work, I went post to post and it started as soon as I pushed the button and pressed on the accelerator.
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