The battery in my 1995 Ford Explorer weighs 45 pounds
If your 1949 truck is a CHEVY or GMC and it still has the original electrical system, it would be 6 volt, negative ground. If it is a Dodge or a Ford with the oringinal electrical system it would be 6 volt, positive ground.
COmputer, loose battery, defective battery/volt amps or loose wiring harness/ wires grounding out somewhere
not really. as long as its a 14.4 volt battery you should be fine. but if your battery is too small, like a motorcycle battery, or the volts jus dont add up, then yes. Gen-R
If the type of light bulb you are using was made to run on 1.5 volts, a 1.5 volt battery should be able to light up one or several of those types if they are each wired in parallel directly across the 1.5 volt battery.If the type of light bulb you are using was made to run on 0.75 volts, a 1.5 volt battery will light up two or more of those types if they are wired in pairs in series across the battery.If the type of light bulb you are using was made to run on, say, 3.0 volts, a 1.5 volt battery will not light it up very much - it may just glow dimly.If the type of light bulb you are using was made to run on any voltage higher than, let's say 5 volts - for instance a standard 120 volt household bulb - then your 1.5 volt battery will not be able to light one of those up at all.Another answerYou can wire any number of 1.5v bulbs in parallel, but for each one you add you will draw more current. Draw too much current and the battery will get hot and may explode, depending on what it is made of.How long the battery will be able to keep the light bulbs lit will depend on the size of the battery, meaning how much charge it can hold. (Its capacity in amp.hours.)
The battery in my 1995 Ford Explorer weighs 45 pounds
On a 1997 Ford Explorer : If each remote takes ( 2 ) coin style lithium 3 volt batteries ( like the 1995 and 1996 models do ) ( it is the # 2016 battery )
A 12 volt power supply outlet.
I was looking at the 1997 Ford Explorer Owner Guide and all it shows is that each remote takes ( 2 ) three volt lithium batteries ( I assume that it would be the same as my 1995 Ford Explorer remotes , and the 1996 Ford Explorer owner guide ) ( each remote takes two # 2016 , three volt lithium coin style batteries )
Each remote takes ( 2 ) coin style 3 volt lithium batteries ( # 2016 )
12v
Yes, this is an automotive 12 volt battery with 650 CCA.
Battery keeps running down when you are driving. Your battery light should be on if the alternator is bad. Check the voltage at the battery with a digital DC volt meter set to the 20 volt scale. You should read from 13.5 to 15.5 volts with the engine running at idle. If not the alternator is suspect.
On a 2002 Ford Explorer : Check the center console , in front of the armrest ( for the 12 volt auxiliary power point )
12 volt
12 Volt
12 volt.