No, if they are wired in series you have 36 volts assuming each battery is a 12 volt battery. They will have to be wired in parallel to output 12 volts. In that case you can charge them with a 12 volt charger but it will take 3 times as long as charging just one 12 volt battery.
Wired in parallel you will have 1.5 volts just like you have 1 battery. Wired in series you will have 4.5 volts. In parellel the amperage will triple but the volts stay the same.
No it will impose the voltage of the three series batteries across the terminals of the paralleled battery. Batteries can only be parallel when all of the voltage potentials are near equal.
Depends on the amperage of the batteries you are using. Both setups will give you 36 volts, but you will normally have a longer run time with six 6 volt batteries in series than three 12 volt batteries. That is why golf carts use 6 volt instead of 12 volt batteries.
Wire two of the 12 volt batteries in series and the third battery in parallel with the other two. As the two batteries wired in series will give you 24 volts but the amps of only one of the batteries, unless you need the extra amperage of that third battery I would just go with two batteries wired in series. But if you want to use three batteries then connect the positive from one battery to the negative of the other battery. This will give you 24 volts. Now just connect the negative of the third battery to the negative of the first battery connected in series with the second battery. Now connect the positive to the second battery to the positive of the third battery. You will now still have 24 volts but twice the amperage of one of the batteries.
You cannot do this. If it were a 36 volt charger you could connect three 12 volt batteries in series and charge all 3 at the same time. But this is a 32 volt charger which I have never heard of.
An AA battery is nominally 1.5 volts, so if the four batteries are wired in series (+ of one to - of the next), the voltage is nominally 6 volts. However, the batteries could also be wired in parallel, with all four positive terminals connected together and all four negative terminals connected together. Then the voltage would be 1.5 volts. To make it even more complicated, you could also wire two pairs, with each battery wired in series to its twin, but with the two pairs wired in parallel to each other. Then the voltage is 3.0 volts.
It should take roughly 1-3 hours to charge the batteries in a hoverboard.
The fable 3 controller takes batteries instead of the charge kit.
You don't charge it you put in 3 new AAA batteries.
It should take roughly 1-3 hours to charge the batteries in a hoverboard.
That depends on how the batteries were wired, for what voltage. If they were to provide a 6 volt source, then yes, but not for very long as the 12 volts would burn the motors out very quickly. If they were wired to provide for 18 volts then yes, but it won't run very fast because of the low voltage.