Discussion:
Charger connection

we have Jungheinrich EMC 10 pallet lift ,that we have rebuild from scrap and we get a new charger and this charger have 5 cables

This seems to be the original charger

1 earth
1 + 4mm2 red cable (thats ok goes to battery)
1 - 4mm2 black cable (thats ok goes to battery)

then it have 2 more cables I wonder if someone could came up with where they should be connected ,orginal card is removed
1 pcs 1,5mm2 purple and 1pcs 1,5mm2 black

Could someone tell me where to connect the 1,5mm2 cables or nice if anyone have technical manual for a Jungheinrich EMC 10
  • Posted 8 Jan 2016 21:41
  • Modified 8 Jan 2016 21:42 by poster
  • By oddie_m
  • joined 8 Jan'16 - 2 messages
  • i, Norway
Showing items 1 - 1 of 1 results.
Hej Oddie.
Skriv din e-post adresse i din profil.
Hilsen Max
  • Posted 27 Jan 2016 17:28
  • By Fittermax
  • joined 17 Jul'08 - 171 messages
  • Denmark
Thank's for helping. Contact d-b-a@mail.com
P i s s Work, gone fishing

Post your Reply

Forkliftaction accepts no responsibility for forum content and requires forum participants to adhere to our rules of conduct. Click here for more information.

If you are having trouble using the Discussion Forums, please contact us for help.

Global Industry News
edition #1245 - 28 August 2025
In this week’s Forkliftaction News , we look at MHEDA’s Q3 Economic Advisory Report which reveals current resilience in the US materials handling sector... Continue reading
UN Forklift FBT20NQZ1
HANGZHOU, Zhejiang, China
New - Sale
Toyota 8FGU30
Flesherton, Ontario, Canada
Used - Sale
Movers & Shakers
Steve Dimitrovski Steve Dimitrovski
Director sales for Australia and New Zealand, Swisslog
General Manager, Forkpro Australia
Global CEO, Swisslog
Board member, UKMHA
Latest job alerts …
Tampa/Orlando Florida, United States
Dallas, TX or Lexington, KY, United States
Fact of the week
The word "okay" (or its abbreviation "OK") originated as a humorous misspelling. In the 1830s, a fad in Boston involved using abbreviations of intentionally misspelled phrases. "OK" stood for "oll korrect," a playful mispronunciation of "all correct".