Need ways to start a car with a dead battery.- 92 Civic Auto.

Discussion in 'Civic' started by Sam Nickaby, Feb 14, 2006.

  1. Sam Nickaby

    AZ Nomad Guest

    Is that really true? How is it possible to push start a car w/
    a manual tranny if the alternator will never put out any current when
    the battery is dead? Perhaps when a battery is "dead", it still has a few
    volts and that is enough for the alternator to operate?
     
    AZ Nomad, Feb 14, 2006
    #21
  2. Sam Nickaby

    Mike Romain Guest


    Most batteries when run down will bounce back some when left to sit with
    everything off. This used to be enough to fire up the alternators for a
    push start.

    The new ones can even have cranking power left at the 'groaning starter'
    stage and yet still not have enough left to fire up the freakin'
    computers. The new Jeeps are really bad for that.

    If the battery has to also fire up an electric fuel pump, then it can
    not have enough left to fire up the alternator so you fail in the push
    start.

    If the battery is dead, it just isn't going to go no matter how fast or
    far you tow or push it unless you have a '1 wire' alternator. ;-)

    Mike
    86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
    88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
    Canadian Off Road Trips Photos: Non members can still view!
    Jan/06 http://www.imagestation.com/album/pictures.html?id=2115147590
    (More Off Road album links at bottom of the view page)
     
    Mike Romain, Feb 14, 2006
    #22
  3. Sam Nickaby

    Pooh Bear Guest

    Yes. You need field current to create the magnetic field.
    Irrelevant during starting.

    Graham
     
    Pooh Bear, Feb 14, 2006
    #23
  4. Sam Nickaby

    Mike Romain Guest

    Say the battery only has enough to fire up the alternator field, then
    the push start can have a sudden 12-14 volts injected into the spark
    circuit which can be enough to start it up.

    If the battery has a heavy draw like an electric fuel pump, it might not
    have enough to fire up the alternator, well in my experience, it doesn't
    have enough, so you get no start on a push.

    The old carb systems didn't have any/many heavy draws with the key in
    'on' so they were 'easy' to push start.

    Mike
    86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
    88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
    Canadian Off Road Trips Photos: Non members can still view!
    Jan/06 http://www.imagestation.com/album/pictures.html?id=2115147590
    (More Off Road album links at bottom of the view page)
     
    Mike Romain, Feb 14, 2006
    #24
  5. Sam Nickaby

    AZ Nomad Guest

    It's relevant if there's no voltage for the ignition system.
     
    AZ Nomad, Feb 14, 2006
    #25
  6. Sam Nickaby

    AZ Nomad Guest

    I don't think the fuel pump is that great a current draw. Two bigger
    problems are 1) it may not run at all on less than 9V or so and 2) it is only
    run for a few seconds when the key is first turned on. By the time
    the electrical system gets it's first kick of juice from the alternator,
    that initial timeout has expired.
     
    AZ Nomad, Feb 14, 2006
    #26
  7. Sam Nickaby

    Pooh Bear Guest

    I doubt that the fuel pump draws that much. I suspect you'll need around 9 volts or
    so still left in the battery for the elctronics to work.You most likely will have
    that unless the battery is totally stone dead.

    As for the alternator, there's always some residual magnetism left.

    Graham
     
    Pooh Bear, Feb 14, 2006
    #27
  8. Sam Nickaby

    Sir Lex Guest

    You would have more chance of winning the lottery... without buying a
    ticket. :)

    If you're that concerned about it, as other's have said, investigate
    buying a booster pack. Another more expensive option is to have a dual
    battery system setup, giving the starter motor it's own battery...
    though that would be the first time I'd ever heard of such a setup in a
    honda civic. :)

    <http://www.tjmproducts.com.au/dual_batteries.html>

    There's the kill switch option, which if installed properly should cut
    power to everything in the car. This also acts as an immobilizer, until
    your potential thief finds the switch (though I cant vouch for the
    intelligence of all car thieves.) The downside to that is if you have a
    security coded radio you'd have to put in the code every time you start
    the car.

    Of course by far the easiest and cheapest option is not to run
    significant amounts of electrics when your motor isn't running.

    How long did you have your stereo and cabin light on for when they ran
    down the battery? You should've been able to have the stereo going and
    your cabin light on for a few hours without any problems. If it was a
    relatively short period of time, you may need to look at purchasing a
    new battery. Typical battery life in a car is 3 - 4 years.

    SL.
     
    Sir Lex, Feb 14, 2006
    #28
  9. Sam Nickaby

    Al Guest

    Mount an Uninterruptible Power supply in the trunk, and give access to the
    12volt connections inside. Charge it off the electrical system, using a
    reverse current diode. When you get into a pinch, bypass the diode, and
    start your car. It also provides full time 110 volt ac for your laptop,
    coolers, or TV.

    Al
     
    Al, Feb 14, 2006
    #29
  10. Sam Nickaby

    AZ Nomad Guest

    That should be good entertainment. Better keep a fire extinguisher in your
    car when 100 amps is running through the power cable and the little gell
    cell in the UPS.
     
    AZ Nomad, Feb 15, 2006
    #30
  11. Sam Nickaby

    Pooh Bear Guest

    That is truly one of the most daft suggestions I've ever seen !

    Congratulations !

    Graham
     
    Pooh Bear, Feb 15, 2006
    #31
  12. I keep a 12 volt DC *jump kit* in the back of my car ( rear floor )
    and it isn't hooked up to anything but has integrated battery cables.
    So since my starter needs 200+ amps to kick over my engine, I don't
    think 100 amps is going to blow up the gel cell.

    On a related note, I've never used it to jump start a vehicle. It is
    really there as a huge backup battery in case I ever need to recharge
    my cell phone and I don't want to or cannot run my engine.

    It's a 17.5 ampere/hour gel cell. 100 amps won't blow up a gel cell.
    In fact, gel cells are used to power golf carts and electric
    wheelchairs.

    Lg
     
    Lawrence Glickman, Feb 15, 2006
    #32
  13. Sam Nickaby

    ed Guest

    Battery switch and another battery for spare. Works in the marine
    environment pretty well. or as mentioned a booster pack, or if you have the
    time a solar charger.
     
    ed, Feb 15, 2006
    #33
  14. If the battery is sufficiently dead you won't be able to spin the
    alternator fast enough to get it to self-energize. Even if it were a
    manual and you were roll-starting it. If it's not that dead, then
    even if you start the car (and unless your name is Herakles you
    won't), what good will it do you? You'll have a near-dead battery
    which isn't being charged (because you disconnected the alternator
    pulley), and the car will most likely die soon after.
     
    Matthew Russotto, Feb 15, 2006
    #34
  15. Where do you get that rule of thumb? Time to recharge will depend a
    small amount on engine speed, and not at all on road speed, so "8
    miles" doesn't make any sense. Second, the amount of current (and
    therefore charge) drawn during a start varies widely from car to car
    and season to season. The charge rate of the alternator also varies
    from car to car. I'd be very surprised, however, if it took as much
    as 8 miles @30mph (or even 60mph) to replenish a single start.
     
    Matthew Russotto, Feb 15, 2006
    #35
  16. It has less to do with the computer and fuel pump than the alternator
    (rather than generator). If the battery is so flat you can't get the
    alternator field energized, you won't get spark, so you'll just flood
    a carbeurated car trying.
    Just make sure the booster pack is kept charged.
     
    Matthew Russotto, Feb 15, 2006
    #36
  17. Usually when people refer to a "dead" battery it just means one which
    won't start the car -- warning lights come on, radio works, but turn
    the ignition and it all goes dark. A manual-tranny car in that
    condition can be push-started.
     
    Matthew Russotto, Feb 15, 2006
    #37
  18. That's just Ohms law biting you in the ass. They'll run the computer
    fine when they aren't cranking the starter. When you close the
    starter solenoid most of the available current goes across the low-resistance
    path to the starter, leaving not enough left for the computer. You
    should still be able to push-start in that case.
     
    Matthew Russotto, Feb 15, 2006
    #38
  19. Sam Nickaby

    Pooh Bear Guest

    Many modern cars do this anyway.

    Graham
     
    Pooh Bear, Feb 15, 2006
    #39
  20. Sam Nickaby

    Pooh Bear Guest

    Bollocks !

    The alternator doesn't come into play *unitil the engine starts*.

    Graham
     
    Pooh Bear, Feb 15, 2006
    #40
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