landmark II
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I am looking to carry a jump starter for my Discovery Series 2 TD5. I am thinking to get a NOCO GB70 can anyone advise me please how well it works with a Discovery Thanks
There's quite an extensive discussion of this on Anything Goes. I have a Noco GB40 that works ok but not brilliant. Others report they are really good. My suspicion is that they vary in quality a bit for some reason.
I am thinking to get a NOCO GB70 can anyone advise me please how well it works with a Discovery
Big Clive did a teardown of a NOCO, OK not the same model, but you might not want to bother, and use a lead acid based booster pack instead.
We had one at work, it very quickly ended up in the skip, I am sure for home it would have been fine but for commerical use no good.
I've been asked to repair a few now, all of them are simply not up to the task, like I said, they're using RC model battery connections to carry starting currents, which these connections while good in the RC world, simply aren't up to the task of starting vehicle engines, at least not many times until they're done.
An absolute waste of money IMHO.
I a commercial environment, no, they're no good.I never used it myself, did ask the day guys what it was like? okay was the non commital response, then literally days later I saw it in the skip, so obviously not that okay!
A lead acid battery is designed to carry starting currents, over and over. A pouch lithium pack, while capable of decent currents in itself, all the required support components aren't up to the task, so mosfets and diodes fail, as these components were never designed to deliver such huge currents. Same with the plugs, cables and connectors, it's all just marginal, which means the service life is short.I perefer to use another vehicle for jump starting, thinking if the batteris can start this one then they are capable of starting another.
They are ok for Mr average, to start a car where the battery is flat due to leaving the lights on. If a vehicle has trouble starting, then a lithium booster pack simply isn't up to the job, which a lead acid based booster wouldn't have trouble with.They must have their uses, as I see quite a few posiitve posts.
I a commercial environment, no, they're no good.
A lead acid battery is designed to carry starting currents, over and over. A pouch lithium pack, while capable of decent currents in itself, all the required support components aren't up to the task, so mosfets and diodes fail, as these components were never designed to deliver such huge currents. Same with the plugs, cables and connectors, it's all just marginal, which means the service life is short.
They are ok for Mr average, to start a car where the battery is flat due to leaving the lights on. If a vehicle has trouble starting, then a lithium booster pack simply isn't up to the job, which a lead acid based booster wouldn't have trouble with.
Having seen what's inside, and understanding electronics, no I'd not waste my money on one.So you saying they sheeite
I had considered getting one. I got 3 mins into Big Clive's video and decided "no way, this is junk"
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