Author Topic: High Power Battery System for Your Portable Electronics  (Read 2471 times)

Offline gr8npwrfl

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High Power Battery System for Your Portable Electronics
« on: July 26, 2008, 06:59:28 PM »
This is a tutorial on how to construct a precision high power
high efficiency DC to DC converter.

Most equipment nowadays runs from either 5 volts or 12 volts.

The problem with 5 volts is you have to regulate the voltage
down from either 6 volts or higher. As a battery depletes the
voltage decreases and a 6 volt battery will drop to 5 volts
when that battery has over 30% of its power left to give.

So then people use 12 volts batteries to run 5 volt equipment.
But the voltage difference has to go somewhere. In most low
cost systems that use regulators such as 7805 the difference goes
out as heat. That is why you see the large aluminum heat sinks
on these devices. The more power you consume the more heat
created.

When you are running this from the AC line, this is not a problem
as you can waste energy.

But when we run from a battery you want as much power from the
battery to be available to your device not wasted as heat.

So we can't use linear regulators, they waste to much power.
So we have to use a switching power supply, but again this is much
more expensive and harder to design.

I do not know about you but I would rather spend my time doing
something else than designing power supplies. So if I go on the
Internet and look for DC to DC converters, I find that I can easily
spend $100 or more for a good switching supply. I wanted one that
could take voltage down to 9 volts and up to 16 volt input.

My electronics are important to me so I also wanted one that would
make sure that I got 5 volts exactly.

So this was a big wish list, especially because I wanted it cheap.

Well you know I would not be writing this if I had not found a solution
to the problem. So here it is.

I found multiple sources for these converters that will give me what
I want.

5 volts at up to 6 amps of current
12 volts at up to 2 amps of current

2% regulation control

Powered from 9 volt to 16 volts.

And I wanted greater than 90% efficiency so my battery goes to my project
not to heat.

All if this for $20.00

It all comes from a new breed of computer. The Carputer as their called. Small
portable computers that are designed to run in your car off of the 12 volt car
battery.

The car battery is a dirty nasty source of power never meant to run fragile
electronics. It takes a lot of cleanup to make it run a computer.

So I found this board.



It is made by a company called Morex and they can be found at

http://www.idotpc.com/thestore/pc/viewPrd.asp?idcategory=69&idproduct=311

This is a DC to DC converter made to power Carputer motherboards.
It runs an entire PC comparable computer and works very well doing it.

We are taking this one and building our own DC converter that will be
powered from a 12 volt battery.

The one I am doing in this article is a little more expensive. It cost $26.00
but only gives more power.

All these boards share one thing in common. They output their power on a
standard atx power plug.

You can buy a cable for a few dollars or cut the one off a dead or old
computer power supply.

On the left side of the board is the power input. +12 volts and Ground. We will
hook this up to our 12 volt battery.

This is what my power plug looks like.



I crimped spade lugs at the ends of the wires so I can just plug it into
my battery.

Now we are going to work on the power cable.

The plug looks like this




Pin     Name           Color     Description

1    3.3V         Orange    +3.3 VDC
2    3.3V         Orange    +3.3 VDC
3    COM         Black    Ground
4    5V         Red    +5 VDC
5    COM         Black    Ground
6    5V         Red    +5 VDC
7    COM         Black    Ground
8    PWR_OK         Gray    Power Ok
9    5VSB         Purple    +5 VDC Standby Voltage (max 10mA)
10    12V         Yellow    +12 VDC
11    3.3V         Orange    +3.3 VDC
12    -12V         Blue    -12 VDC
13    COM         Black    Ground
14    /PS_ON         Green    Power Supply On (active low).
15    COM         Black    Ground
16    COM         Black    Ground
17    COM         Black    Ground
18    -5V         White    -5 VDC
19    5V         Red    +5 VDC
20    5V         Red    +5 VDC

You will notice that most of the +5 volt outputs have a ground
next to them. We will use this.

I have no need for -5 volts, -12 volts, or 3.3 volt so you can
either cut the wires off, remove the wires from the plug, or
just cap the wires so they don't short.

To make this supply work in our application we only have to
short pin 14 to ground to turn the supply on. I used a simple
on off rocker switch to act as my power on/off button.

I wired several of the + 5 volt with their neighboring ground
to plugs that correspond to my equipment I need to power



Here is a picture of one of my power plugs on a +5 volt line.
Notice I have caps for them to be extra careful not to short
them if I am not using this one.



You see the cap off so I can plug it into my device.



I am also wiring a cigarette lighter socket because my
battery charger uses this to plug in.



So this is my completed harness plugged into the DC to
Dc converter board. This is ready to plug into a battery
and use.



Now that I have my complete converter, I can actually use
a battery that is half the size, Here is a picture of smaller
battery next to my original one.



If you have not thought about it by now, you can just
as well put a cigarette lighter plug on the input side
of this converter and run the entire system off you car
battery.

If you just want to charge your PSP you can probably recharge
your PSP for about two weeks of playing off of one charge of
this battery.

Just be careful that the plus and minus of the input is
connected correctly or you will blow your fuse.

Because the system converts DC voltage to DC voltage you can
touch the converter board without harm. It generates no heat
so you can simply put your converter in a plastic box.

There you have it a low cost high power high efficiency power
system for your portable electronics.

Have a great day !

« Last Edit: July 28, 2008, 09:20:18 PM by gr8npwrfl »


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Re: High Power Battery System for Your Portable Electronics
« Reply #1 on: July 26, 2008, 07:44:30 PM »
Thats awesome, I've got a DC to DC converter around my house that has the same pins ect., I'm might try it out soon

Offline Blazinkaos

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Re: High Power Battery System for Your Portable Electronics
« Reply #2 on: July 26, 2008, 10:21:41 PM »
wow nice..
and the battery you can use for 2 weeks to charge the psp is a car battery..



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Offline gr8npwrfl

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Re: High Power Battery System for Your Portable Electronics
« Reply #3 on: July 26, 2008, 11:04:43 PM »
No the battery is a small gell cell battery. It is the same kind that is used in small kids battery operated cars, cycles, and tricycles.

Out here is California we have a chain of stores called "Batteries Plus" they sell all kinds of batteries from watches to car and industrial batteries. You can get gell cell batteries from them.

The small square battery I had a picture of was the battery back up from a home alarm system.

They even use these type of batteries in the electric wheelchairs and scooters.

The neat part of this power design is you can even put D cell flashlight batteries together to make a power pack. D cell batteries are 1.5 volts each so you can use anywhere from 7 to 10 D cell batteries giving you 10.5 to 15 volts respectively.

So you could take a 8 D cell flashlight and put 8 D cell batteries and a jack plug in the regulator and
have an emergency disposable charger to run your items from.

If you had taken one of the 5 volt outputs and wired it to a mini usb plug you can even charge your cell phone while you are charging your PSP and your DS all at the same time you are charging your IPOD.

I was just showing how to take a part that is inexpensive and make a universal battery backup and charger for a small amount of money.

This is one way to take something that is pretty common and use it for other things. That is what
is great about engineering, taking something that was designed and mass produced thinking outside the box and make it make your life easier.

I could have done the same thing by cutting open a laptop power supply and modifying it. But laptop supplies are expensive ($100) and I would have to have taken it apart, change the values of components to make it output 5 volts. Since each model number power supply is different it would only have worked for the one type I had. This would not have helped anyone but a very few.

The supply I had laying around in my junk box from a slim desktop computer that used a power brick instead of the cord going into the computer.

It took me more time to write it up than it did to pull it out and wire it up.


Offline Blazinkaos

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Re: High Power Battery System for Your Portable Electronics
« Reply #4 on: July 26, 2008, 11:16:49 PM »
sweet so you can quite a bit with that battery

i never seen and the place idk i live florida so maybe in some wear house they must have them...

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Offline Tri-edge

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Re: High Power Battery System for Your Portable Electronics
« Reply #5 on: July 27, 2008, 07:41:41 AM »
Out here is California we have a chain of stores called "Batteries Plus" they sell all kinds of batteries from watches to car and industrial batteries. You can get gell cell batteries from them.
Sweet another Californian  :drunk: What part of California are you from? (that is if you don't mind me asking)

Offline gr8npwrfl

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Re: High Power Battery System for Your Portable Electronics
« Reply #6 on: July 27, 2008, 09:58:16 AM »
Southern California, I'm in an area called the Inland Empire about half way between LA and San Diego


Offline Blazinkaos

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Re: High Power Battery System for Your Portable Electronics
« Reply #7 on: July 28, 2008, 09:57:16 AM »
i been through there.

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