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#11
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12 volt DC Voltage Stabiliser circuit
"Meindert Sprang" wrote in
: I have first hand experience with expensive touchscreen LCD's from Xenex. These were 24V screens and a 90-240V adapter was supplied. 12 were installed in a 96' motor yacht and they all fried (backlight) within 6 weeks. Turns out they could not stand 28.8V of a fully charged battery bank, so we installed 24/24V DC/DC converters. Meindert Wow, what a piece of crap that thing was! Why didn't we take back the DEFECTIVE PRODUCTS? Was the regulator in the wall adapter?? That's just plain stupid, right there! Larry -- Extremely intelligent life exists that is so smart they never called Earth. |
#12
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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12 volt DC Voltage Stabiliser circuit
I would like to thank everyone for their help and comments.
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#13
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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12 volt DC Voltage Stabiliser circuit
If you can locate an HP F1064A it might do the trick. These are DC to
DC converters designed for older HP laptops that had a 12v input to be ran off of a car battery. They supply around 60watts I think and provided a regulated 12v out. Getting a steady 12v out when the input is lower and sometimes higher then the output is a more difficult job for DC to DC converts. These old HP units handle it well. Have seen them on Ebay every once and a while for around $20. (One is there now listed for over $100, and incorrectly calling it an AC adapter.) I am using one for to drive my LCD panel. And FWIW, when I measured the output on the LCDs supplied AC adapter, it was 12.4v no load, down to 12.2v under load..... -al- |
#14
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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12 volt DC Voltage Stabiliser circuit
Al Thomason wrote:
If you can locate an HP F1064A it might do the trick. These are DC to DC converters designed for older HP laptops that had a 12v input to be ran off of a car battery. They supply around 60watts I think and provided a regulated 12v out. Getting a steady 12v out when the input is lower and sometimes higher then the output is a more difficult job for DC to DC converts. These old HP units handle it well. Have seen them on Ebay every once and a while for around $20. (One is there now listed for over $100, and incorrectly calling it an AC adapter.) I am using one for to drive my LCD panel. And FWIW, when I measured the output on the LCDs supplied AC adapter, it was 12.4v no load, down to 12.2v under load..... Good find Al. I searched the descriptions too for F1064A and there are a few of those at more reasonable prices ($40 shipped) in one of the eBay stores: http://tinyurl.com/2u5bwx The specs listed there a INPUT: 9V - 24V DC, 8.5A MAX OUTPUT: 12V DC 40W, negative-tip Jack -- Jack Erbes in Ellsworth, Maine, USA (jackerbes at adelphia dot net) (also receiving email at jacker at midmaine dot com) |
#15
posted to rec.boats.electronics
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12 volt DC Voltage Stabiliser circuit
"Al Thomason" wrote in message ... If you can locate an HP F1064A it might do the trick. These are DC to DC converters designed for older HP laptops that had a 12v input to be ran off of a car battery. They supply around 60watts I think and provided a regulated 12v out. Getting a steady 12v out when the input is lower and sometimes higher then the output is a more difficult job for DC to DC converts. These old HP units handle it well. Have seen them on Ebay every once and a while for around $20. (One is there now listed for over $100, and incorrectly calling it an AC adapter.) I am using one for to drive my LCD panel. And FWIW, when I measured the output on the LCDs supplied AC adapter, it was 12.4v no load, down to 12.2v under load..... -al- AL Thanks for pointing this out. Looks like it could be one solution to providing a steady 12 volts to those very expensive masthead LED lights. Think I'll get one before the supply dries up g. |
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