Depends on the battery. They are not all the same.
It depends on the battery , a BCI group size 65 battery is rated at 650
cold cranking amps
To charge a car battery you need aproximatly 8000 amps To charge a car battery you need aproximatly 8000 amps
It varies by manufacturer and battery.
NO You have to many AMPS from a car, you can jump start it butdon't charge it.
modern cars use a 12 volt battery. Amps depends on the battery. Common sizes range from 500-800 cold cranking amps.
Yes, there is really no van battery or car battery. There is just an automotive battery. Installing a battery with more Cold Cranking Amps (CCA) is fine and will just provide more power in cold temperatures.
Nothing at all. Increasing the cranking amps will not harm anything. The starter will only draw the amps it needs.
Yes, that is how you know that the battery is "strong" enough to start your car in cold weather. A battery in warm weather may have enough amps to start the car fine, but in cold weather, it wouldn't be able to crank it fast enough. A car battery efficiency drops off the colder it gets.
If the battery has more cranking amps than the recommended battery and will fit into the battery carrier box the answer is yes.
cca is 'cold cranking amps' in other words how many amperes can a given battery supply to crank a cold car engine. A good battery can give 400 amps for cold cranking.
there are lots more amps in a car battery eg there about 1.5 in a flash light and in a car battery there about 300 A car battery is a wet cell battery and a flashlight battery is a dry cell battery.
Depends on the battery. It is listed on the battery as Cold Cranking Amps (CCA).
Cranking amps determine the amount of power that it takes to start a car in most climates. The amount of cranking amps that a battery for a 2003 Jeep Grand Cherokee has would entirely depend on the type of battery that the vehicle has.