Stuff We Use: What’s the Best Battery Booster Pack?

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

On our never-ending quest to improve this place by listening to feedback from the B&B, we are taking a new tack with these product posts, choosing instead to focus on items we use and have purchased with our own meager income. After all, if we’re giving you the truth about cars, we ought to give you the truth about car accessories.

 

One of the reasons this site works well is thanks to the marked similarities of, erm, quirks our writers have in common with readers. Like so many of you, most of our properties house at least one vehicle which won’t start on the first try, to say nothing of the random boxes of junkyard detritus accumulated through years of vehicular mayhem. 


 

Busted hoopties often have dead batteries, making the modern booster pack something of a must-have around these parts. Sure, one could string out a set of jumper cables to a neighboring vehicle but that’s likely only going to result in a tangled web of wires that would kill all the Flying Wallendas. Besides, that other car probably has a dead battery, too.

 

Rapidly approaching his mid-forties, this author continues to use an older battery pack purchased about a decade ago – yet it is one that’s still available to buy new and provides plenty of teaching opportunities he’d like to pass on to the reader. This 20-pound honker is heavy as lead thanks to its acid-based battery composition but has never failed to spin the engine of everything from a John Deere lawn tractor to a Duramax-equipped Silverado. Rated at 1000 peak amps and 500 crank assist amps, this thing is still good for about three successful starting attempts before needing a recharge even after ten years of use.

 

If you take nothing else away from this post, it should be that old-school battery packs of this sort show up in two types: One that turns on via a dedicated on/off switch and one that rouses from its slumber by detecting a trickle of charge from the battery to which it is connected. The latter type was found to be absolutely useless, in my experience, since most of what I was boosting had batteries that were flatter than Kansas. Even if the pack was fully charged, it would not awaken to provide juice to the car in question.

 

TL;DR – if you’re investing in one of these styles of battery booster packs, make absolutely certain it has an on/off switch to activate the leads.

 

Of course, one needn’t lug around a heavy battery pack these days, not with the myriad of compact 12V jump starter units on the market. Many of these aren’t much bigger than a couple packs of smokes, leading this old guy to initially think they would not be capable of jump-starting a Little Tykes Cozy Coupe, let alone a Lincoln Town Car. I was utterly mistaken. Most of these things have enough gumption to light the fires on even large V8 engines at least once before needing a recharge, and their compact dimensions mean owners can easily stuff one in the glove box or spare tire well.

That latter point is of no small importance to parents whose youngsters have a whip in which they might find themselves (or a friend) stranded. Hell, I sure could have used one of these things in my own formative years instead of loitering in a flat parking lot and relying on the kindness of strangers to help get my beaten Ford Escort back on the road. I say flat because I quickly learned to park on a hill and pop its clutch to start the thing.

This booster from a company called Noco makes it into our post since I’ve used precisely the same unit in the not-too-distant past. The fact it is atop Amazon’s list of recommended products is probably why the person bought it in the first place. Nevertheless, it was dead simple to connect, belts out 1000A, and started an old V6-equipped Grand Am on the first go.

 

HOWEVER – and this is a big note – users must push the ‘polarity override’ button (the one with an exclamation point symbol) before connecting it to a battery if they suspect the battery is truly and completely dead. Remember the whole on/off switch debacle I mentioned earlier? Unless that override button is pushed, this Noco will not wake itself to boost a completely dead battery. The (!) button works as a true on/off switch, even if that is not its intended or advertised function. With that critical bit of information, which is mentioned in accompanying literature but not totally obvious, this is a great unit in most scenarios.


This booster pack from a brand called Scosche has also been used around our place to start items like wayward vehicles and a tractor. Despite looking (and sized) for all the world like a flashlight one would find in their household junk drawer, it has never failed to spin the starter on whatever vehicle to which it is attached. However, it is not clear if the thing would work with a totally dead battery like the other two units described above. Still, I am shocked by its capability in such a small package.

 

As planned, this series of posts will continue to focus on items we actually use and have bought with our own money. We hope you found this one helpful.


[Images: Manufacturer]

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Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

More by Matthew Guy

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  • SPPPP SPPPP on Sep 21, 2023

    The little boosters work way better than you would expect. I am a little nervous about carrying one more lithium battery around in the car (because of fire risk). But I have used the booster more than once on trips, and it has done the job. Also, it seems to hold charge for a very long time - months at least - when you don't use it. (I guess I could start packing it for trips, but leaving it out of the car on normal days, to minimize the fire risk.)

  • RHD RHD on Sep 21, 2023

    "Nevertheless, it was dead simple to connect, belts out 1000A..."


    Actually, a battery, or a booster pack, provides the current that is drawn. It doesn't force its maximum capacity into the starter motor. A 650 Cold Cranking Amp battery won't start a Ford Escort any better than a 325 CCA battery.

    "Belting out 1000A" would fry the components in the circuit in short order.

  • 3-On-The-Tree Old news if it is even true. But from m my time as Firefighter/EMT fighting vehicle fires when it catches fire it is very toxic.
  • Akear Chinese cars simply do not have the quality of their Japanese and Korean counterparts. Remember, there are also tariffs on Chinese cars.
  • 3-On-The-Tree My experience with turbos is that they don’t give good mpg.
  • GregLocock They will unless you don't let them. Every car manufacturing country around the world protects their local manufacturers by a mixture of legal and quasi legal measures. The exception was Australia which used to be able to design and manufacture every component in a car (slight exaggeration) and did so for many years protected by local design rules and enormous tariffs. In a fit of ideological purity the tariffs were removed and the industry went down the plughole, as predicted. This was followed by the precision machine shops who made the tooling, and then the aircraft maintenance business went because the machine shops were closed. Also of course many of the other suppliers closed.The Chinese have the following advantagesSlave laborCheap electricityZero respect for IPLong term planning
  • MaintenanceCosts Yes, and our response is making it worse.In the rest of the world, all legacy brands are soon going to be what Volvo is today: a friendly Western name on products built more cheaply in China or in companies that are competing with China from the bottom on the cost side (Vietnam, India, etc.) This is already more or less the case in the Chinese market, will soon be the case in other Asian markets, and is eventually coming to the EU market.We are going to try to resist in the US market with politicians' crack - that is, tariffs. Economists don't really disagree on tariffs anymore. Their effect is to depress overall economic activity while sharply raising consumer prices in the tariff-imposing jurisdiction.The effect will be that we will mostly drive U.S.-built cars, but they will be inferior to those built in the rest of the world and will cost 3x-4x as much. Are you ready for your BMW X5 to be three versions old and cost $200k? Because on the current path that is what's coming. It may be overpriced crap that can't be sold in any other world market, but, hey, it was built in South Carolina.The right way to resist would be to try to form our own alliances with the low-cost producers, in which we open our markets to them while requiring adherence to basic labor and environmental standards. But Uncle Joe isn't quite ready to sign that kind of trade agreement, while the orange guy just wants to tell those countries to GFY and hitch up with China if they want a friend.
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