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Confusion regarding jump starting a car

Electrical Engineering Asked by Staki42 on November 30, 2021

I tried to understand what is going on when one jump starts a car with a dead battery and reading through a lot of explanations, one question remained:

You start by connecting the the + poles with the first (red) cable. After that, you take the second (black) cable and connect it to the – pole of the charged battery.

For safety reasons, you apparently should not connect it to the – pole of the dead battery though, but rather to some bare metal away from the battery. Here is where I am confused. While it is explained everywhere why we do not want to connect it to the battery directly and I think I understood the issue here (risk of explosion), I could not find an explanation for the following:

How does connecting the cable to some arbitrary piece of bare metal charge up the battery? Does that mean the negative pole of the battery is connected to all of the metal in the car, and thus the current flows through the whole car body during the process?

Maybe I also have a fundamental physical misunderstanding here, I hope someone can enlighten me.

2 Answers

The negative terminal on a battery connect directly to the body of the car, usually the frame or engine. So when you connect your jumper cables to some arbitrary piece of bare metal, you're in fact hooking it to the negative terminal of the battery.

It's so much easier hooking up jumper cables when you can just hook up the negative to any bolt on the engines.

Answered by JACK on November 30, 2021

Does that mean the negative pole of the battery is connected to all of the metal in the car, and thus the current flows through the whole car body during the process?

Yes. It's cheaper and more convenient than running a copper ground wire everywhere.

Answered by DKNguyen on November 30, 2021

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