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Justinm is correct, it is a battery that reads too high of a voltage, it may be set as a dual voltage truck, and you will need someone with the handset to adjust it. you might have good luck leaving the headlights on a few hours, (drain a 10th of a volt or so off the surface charge of the battery) then pulling the battery connection and re-plugging the battery in.
  • Posted 8 Jul 2008 21:06
  • Modified 8 Jul 2008 21:07 by poster
  • By edward_t
  • joined 5 Mar'08 - 2,334 messages
  • South Carolina, United States
"it's not rocket surgery"

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Editorial calendar - planned features
CONSTRUCTION FORKLIFTS
HANDLING GOODS IN THE COLD
LOADING/UNLOADING FREIGHT
BROWNFIELD AUTOMATION
FORKLIFT ATTACHMENTS
BATTERY AFFORDABILITY AND LIFETIME
FORKLIFT SAFETY
Fact of the week
In 1898, author Morgan Robertson wrote a novel called 'Futility', which described an "unsinkable" ship named the Titan that sank after hitting an iceberg. Fourteen years later, the Titanic sank in a strikingly similar fashion.