Each step from first to last is presented in order ~apex
Just because the jumpstart did not start the car does not eliminate the battery as suspect. Have the battery tested. If the battery tests good and the car still does not start (assuming the starter is spinning fast enough). the next step is to ensure that fuel is reaching the engine. Following that, the next step is to check the wiring from the ignition switch to the starter solenoid/relay and look for a loose or disconnected wire.
Battery is in the trunk but there is a terminal to jumpstart the car in the engine bay.
How_do_you_jump_start_a_carthis is how you jumpstart a car.
probably but try charging the battery for a day or two first
Yes you can. i have done it a few times now.
sounds like a flat battery get a battery charger or jumpstart it with jump leads
Each step from first to last is presented in order
it's 507 on Saturday afternoon and you're on your way home from the water park.
no!
You have to have two battery jumper cables. One cable connects to the Bettle battery plus connector and the plus side of the battery in a (engine running) jumpstart car. The other cable connects to the jumpstart car negative battery connector and the bettle minus battery connector. It is important to let the donor car charge the Bettle battery for ten to fiftenn minutes because most jumper cables are poor quality and size to immediately supply all the current to the Bettle starter by themselves. Give the Bettle battery a while to charge and let it help the cranking process.
No one invented a specific electric car battery, it was more a gradual thing starting with a generic battery and then step by step changing it to something more suited for the specific requirements of a car.