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you can try to reset your charger and get it working again:
Check the battery voltage: Use a voltmeter to check the voltage of your battery. If it's below 3 volts, it may be too low for the charger to detect. In this case, you may need to use a different charger or replace the battery.
Check the connections: Make sure that the battery terminals are clean and securely connected to the charger. Loose connections can cause voltage drops and prevent the charger from detecting the battery.
Check the fuse: If your charger has a fuse, check if it's blown. A blown fuse can prevent the charger from working properly.
Reset the charger: Unplug your charger from the power source and remove any connected batteries. Wait for 10 seconds and then plug it back in. This should reset your charger and clear any error codes.
If none of these steps work, you may need to contact customer support
first, check your charger by a disconnect in the battery
2nd put charging "ON" you can test your battery charger by put of any bulb. When light "on" it means you have battery charger working.
Take the batteries down to a battery shop and have them load tested. Make absolutely sure they are DEEP CYCLE batteries. My 35a\h batteries put out 480 cranking amps. The battery shop can also test your charger. I have two chargers for my scooter the 4amp charger that came built into the chair, and a really nice three stage 5amp external charger. My scooters batteries have two 50amp quick disconnect connectors. I made up an external harness for the 5amp charger with the same connectors. I can now charge up my batteries out of the scooter. They say my built in charger is a 4amp charger, its slow in comparison to the 5amp charger. Batteries are expensive, regular chargers charge at one rate, full speed and can overcharge a battery. A three stage charger is by far way batter on your batteries. When you start to charge a depleted battery it put out full 5amps but as the battery nears being charged the charger backs off the amperage. When the battery is fully charged the charger goes into float mode and put out just enough amperage to maintain the charge. When i'm not using my scooter i keep the batteries connected to this charger. Deep cycle glass mat batteries don't stay charged very long when just sitting around. In about six months a dead battery will sulfate to the point where it will no longer take a charge. That happened to me once and cost me $200, never again will this happen to me. Battery shops are great places they have the instruments to tell you everything you need to know about the batteries. The batteries are the heart of your scooter unless you know there condition all kinds of strange things can happen. To make sure my batteries were good i have them checked against a known good set of batteries. BTW- Cranking amp is measured by putting a load on battery and increasing that load until the voltage falls off. At the point just before that voltage drop they measure the amperage output, that is you're cranking amps
Lithium Ion batteries don't charge the same way ni-cads or ni-mh do. You need a lithium ion specific charger to charge them. (Some chargers do multiple types.)
if you have a battery charger and a friend[extra set of hands] you will not have to reset anything including your radio presets. remove battery hold down, loosen battery terminal bolts, hook battery charger up to terminals, have your second set of hands hold the terminals up and out of the way with the charger still hooked up to them, lift out old battery, put new one in, put terminals back on and disconect charger. tighten terminals and put battery hold down back on.
How many amps does this charger put out????
A small trickle charger will take forever to fully recharge a dead battery, you'll need to have a battery charger that can put out enough amps to properly charge a dead battery.To clarify, the chargers sold at Sears, the large square types on wheels are the best for charging dead batteries and they also have an amp meter telling you how much the battery is accepting. After you charge your battery, you should be around 12.5 volts to 12.7 volts. DO NOT OVER CHARGE!!!
You put the battery into the camera. Put the USB end from your computer cord into the end of the AC adapter hook it up to your camera. Ta-da! Everything should be working smoothly in the battery/charger department. :)
You need a new battery. That battery goes dead maybe its a factory defect its very rare this to happen but try to contact the Company to ask if you have a warranty for this unit. One more thing make sure that your charger is functioning.
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