Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
18650's seem to hover around 2,000-3,000mAh capacity, although the chinese are hyping up the numbers.
A 4-pack rated "9900mAh" is really 4 of 2,475mAh cells.
Amazon reviews for the 5,000mAh labelled cells say they get 1,200-2,200mAh.
It's the laws of physics.
I think OP got 14 days with 3.7V 9,900mAh pack, roughly a 30mA load.
Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
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Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
Gosh they already got to almost 10Ah on 18650's? I thought they freshly got the idea to relabel a 2Ah cell to 5Ah, and now 10Ah?Leave a comment:
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Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
The fully charged set of batteries lasted a full 14 days, I refreshed them on Friday Feb. 17.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
FYI
The batteries lasted 8 days. Not terrible because I got two sets and two chargers for the price. So I charge up the other pair while one pair takes a week to discharge.
I am waiting for my regulator boards to see if I can get the receiver working without the batteries.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
So far, this works just fine. Thank you srhofmann for the suggestion.
Here is what I did.
1. Purchased 4pcs 18650 3.7V 9900mAh Rechargeable Li-ion Battery +2 Charger Set High Capacity. From Ebay for $12.69 including shipping.
2. Modified one of the 2 chargers to be a battery holder.
3. Soldered a proper barrel connecter and short lead into the "battery holder".
This is working just fine. Let's see how long the batteries last.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
That Power supply module has minimal capacitance on it, which means it is a bit noisy. Battery power is extremely quiet and it may be the receiver doesn't work well with noisy power.
I would add a big capacitor at the receiver's input power - say 1,000-4,700uF to see how it does. The cap will filter some power supply noise and also give a boost when the solenoid needs it.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
I have several choices including 24V 6a power supply.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
Here is a link to Ebay where I purchased them.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/20W-DC-DC-4-...MAAOSwopRYeZR5
Also see phot attached.
BTW, what is the feeding Voltage to that board?Leave a comment:
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Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
Ok, so the chime is a solenoid and gong... Or a loudspeaker? A solenoid could need 4amps peak.
That Power supply module has minimal capacitance on it, which means it is a bit noisy. Battery power is extremely quiet and it may be the receiver doesn't work well with noisy power.
I would add a big capacitor at the receiver's input power - say 1,000-4,700uF to see how it does. The cap will filter some power supply noise and also give a boost when the solenoid needs it.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
Here is a link to Ebay where I purchased them.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/20W-DC-DC-4-...MAAOSwopRYeZR5
Also see phot attached.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
Here is why I'm pursuing a 4.5 volt 4 amp supply.
1. I am talking about the receiver only.
2. The receiver uses 3 C cells for 4.5 volts.
3. I first tried a 5 volt 2 amp supply and that did not work; meaning the signal led in the receiver flashed with motion on the PIR but no chime.
4. I them tried a 5 volt 3 amp supply I had around and that worked intermittently; meaning the the signal led in the receiver flashed with motion on the PIR but the chime worked about 2 times out of 10.
5. Yes, the device works 100% of the time with new batteries.
The reason I want to use a power supply instead of the C cells is cost. The brand new batteries lasted less than 1 month. Too much activity for battery operation.
Thanks for everyones suggestions, I appreciate the thoughts. I know my method of getting to 4.5 volts and 4 amps is non-scientific but I'm having fun trying to solve the problem. All I want is a cheap solution that also works 100% of the time.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
Are the 5V power supply regulated? Linear non regulated? Or SMPS regulated?
It is easy enough to check the current draw of the unit.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
Here is why I'm pursuing a 4.5 volt 4 amp supply.
1. I am talking about the receiver only.
2. The receiver uses 3 C cells for 4.5 volts.
3. I first tried a 5 volt 2 amp supply and that did not work; meaning the signal led in the receiver flashed with motion on the PIR but no chime.
4. I them tried a 5 volt 3 amp supply I had around and that worked intermittently; meaning the the signal led in the receiver flashed with motion on the PIR but the chime worked about 2 times out of 10.
5. Yes, the device works 100% of the time with new batteries.
The reason I want to use a power supply instead of the C cells is cost. The brand new batteries lasted less than 1 month. Too much activity for battery operation.
Thanks for everyones suggestions, I appreciate the thoughts. I know my method of getting to 4.5 volts and 4 amps is non-scientific but I'm having fun trying to solve the problem. All I want is a cheap solution that also works 100% of the time.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
They sell an adaptor for that and its rated 4.5 volts 1 amp https://www.amazon.com/Wall-Power-Ad.../dp/B007HOKH2I
and this one comes with the adaptor http://www.2270.pricereview.co/blog/...e-Adapter.html
BTW, that is regulated 4.5V 1A power supply, I wonder he was using non regulated linear power supply so light load Voltage will be much higher than 5V, he needs to check that 5V supply he was trying to use.
They use C cells so you do not have to replace batteries too often.Last edited by budm; 01-24-2017, 09:23 PM.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
A very cheap and simple trick to get around 4.5v from 5v would be to simply put a diode in series with the positive wire of the power supply.
A regular diode will drop around 0.7v and a schottky diode will have a voltage drop of around 0.35-0.5v voltage drop.
The efficiency lost is minimal, not much more than what would be if you'd use a DC-DC converter.
That device is unlikely to use more than 1A from batteries so it's not much wasted on the diodes.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
No, drawing 4A continuously from C cells does not sound right, where did this number come from? Can you use a capacitor to help against instantaneous draw, as that thing can't possibly be drawing 17+W continuously. Does the device still work on batteries, did you measure how much current it actually draws? Three brand new C cells in series can get pretty darn close to 5V so it should well be within the proper operating range.
Something else is wrong.Leave a comment:
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Re: Need 4.5 Volt 4 Amp Power Supply, Cheap
They sell an adaptor for that and its rated 4.5 volts 1 amp https://www.amazon.com/Wall-Power-Ad.../dp/B007HOKH2I
and this one comes with the adaptor http://www.2270.pricereview.co/blog/...e-Adapter.htmlLast edited by R_J; 01-24-2017, 07:31 PM.Leave a comment:
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