I can disguise the 9v battery as payload in the cargo bay, too.


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Ask and ye shall recieveShamrock_Don wrote:Atlantis - excellent work.
Care to share the schematic for your bussards?
I'd suggest going with AAA's myself - 9v batteries have a horrendous lifespan - you'll be replacing them much too oftenThrusterhead Jones wrote:The plan now is to illuminate a whole bunch of LEDs (9 standard whites, 2 white super-brights, 2 super bright reds, 3 standard reds, and one green) with batteries. The 2 spuper bright reds will be on 1 or 2 flasher circuits. I could get away eith powering it with a wall wart but I don't want to have a wire comming out its butt and I'd like to have the option to hang the thing from the ceiling. the flasher pcb(s) would end up being probably 1.2" sq. which should fit into the aft section with out any problem, and some kind of perf board with an array of current dropper resistors, but anything bigger than a standard 9v battery may take up too much room. Any suggestions?
Working on this sort of problem now... do you have any shots of the jack and plug setup?My TOS-E, I modified the engineering hull to use a brass rod as the stand, then run a power cord up the center of that - the connection between the model and the rod is a standard 2-conductor mini-plug/jack. The jack is glued to the engineering hull, the plug to the top of the brass rod - putting the model on the stand plugs in the power
Ask and ye shall recievestarmanmm wrote:SCC-7107 USS Atlantis wrote:
Working on this sort of problem now... do you have any shots of the jack and plug setup?My TOS-E, I modified the engineering hull to use a brass rod as the stand, then run a power cord up the center of that - the connection between the model and the rod is a standard 2-conductor mini-plug/jack. The jack is glued to the engineering hull, the plug to the top of the brass rod - putting the model on the stand plugs in the power
Actually, that was Milliput White to create the 'hump'starmanmm wrote:Thanks
It looks like you used aves or something similar to attach it to the engineering section.
Funny thing is... I really don't recognize either type of plugs you used.![]()
Any more info on that?