Small Honda -----> these cables -----> 3 minutes of my time -----> totally dead Cadillac Escalade revived.



They're long, heavy gauge, have good clamps with multiple grip options (for flat surfaces, battery terminals, bolts, etc.), they wrap up small, and come with a great little case that adds no bulk and fits in my spare compartment. Just add them to your cart already.



A tip for anyone not experienced using jumper cables or who is worried about other reviews about this pair:

- Read a reliable step-by-step guide online or from your vehicle owners manual;

- Before using, practice never having any clamp/cable end get anywhere near another one. If you have a helping hand, just tell that person that the absolute only thing they should be doing while helping you is holding 1 clamp, each in separate hands, as far away as possible at all times -- not handing you tools, not pointing things out, not checking their phone, not drinking a drink.

- Do a dry run -- connect 1 clamp *only* to one of the vehicle parts you need to clamp onto, e.g., positive battery terminal on the dead car, until you know what it takes for it to stay there right. Then, unclamp (don't connect the other end or any other clamp), and repeat for every other surface (e.g., bare metal surface on dead car, positive and negative battery terminals on jumper car), always with only 1 clamp connected at any given time. Don't wait until you have deadly electricity running through these things to find out that the dubious spot you hoped and prayed the clamp would hold onto was a really bad choice, causing the cable to suddenly jump off and make contact with your car, another clamp on the same battery, a person, or a moving part of your engine;

- Finally, when in use, pretend you are holding 4 lit, explosive torches when you are handling/connecting/disconnecting cables for real -- realize that you are dealing with real electricity that can really hurt you or your car if you're not extremely careful. Be extremely careful, slow, and patient, and the chances of a serious problem are actually very small.