- 1,845
- 51
- 48
- Location
- Berkeley CA
Parts required:
NATO plug
Two strips of copper or heavy copper wire
Wire up the plug so that you get about an inch of copper showing out of each hole. One for Positive
and one for negative.
Red tape or a spot of red paint to indicate the Positive lead on the NATO Plug. Prevents FUBAR when you are rushing.
See diagram for jump settup using typical two 12 volt AAA jump packs.
Operation:
Step #1 Clip the positive lead from one pack to the negative lead of the other pack.
Step #2 Cip the remaining free positive lead to the positive lead on the NATO Plug.
Step #3 Clip the remaining free negative leed to the negative lead on the NATO Plug.
Bruce
NATO plug
Two strips of copper or heavy copper wire
Wire up the plug so that you get about an inch of copper showing out of each hole. One for Positive
and one for negative.
Red tape or a spot of red paint to indicate the Positive lead on the NATO Plug. Prevents FUBAR when you are rushing.
See diagram for jump settup using typical two 12 volt AAA jump packs.
Operation:
Step #1 Clip the positive lead from one pack to the negative lead of the other pack.
Step #2 Cip the remaining free positive lead to the positive lead on the NATO Plug.
Step #3 Clip the remaining free negative leed to the negative lead on the NATO Plug.
Bruce
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