hello all! I am beginning work on my pl 1/350 enterprise, and am building my own circuits for the lights. I've currently got my blinking formation and strobe circuits being powered by a 9 volt battery, and will be basing the rest of my lights on 9 volts. My question is this; I have a wall wart that was originally intended for a portable cd player. The output of the wall wart is 9 volts 600 mA. Can I safely use this wall wart (if I remove the adapter for the cd player and directly solder the ends onto my pc board) to power my circuits.
Not looking for a shocking experience!
Many thanks in advance!
powering lights for 1/350 enterprise
Moderators: Sparky, Moderators
-
- Posts: 271
- Joined: Sat Jan 29, 2011 8:01 pm
powering lights for 1/350 enterprise
Since my customary farewell would appear oddly self-serving; I shall simply say, good luck.
I'm married. That's what being married means. It means you sleep together, but you can't get none!
(Martin Lawrence in Bad Boys)
I'm married. That's what being married means. It means you sleep together, but you can't get none!
(Martin Lawrence in Bad Boys)
- USS Atlantis
- Posts: 2388
- Joined: Sat Sep 08, 2007 6:44 pm
- Location: Galaxy 217, Orion Arm, Sol System, Sol III, 44° 53' N 93° 13' W (Local coordinate system)
- Contact:
I would actually leave the plug on and install a jack in the model
Also, make sure the wall-wart is a regulated PS - else add a rectifier circuit to your main board before anything else
CD players are more tolerant of voltage variations than LED circuits, so the PS may NOT be regulated, and that spells danger for the LEDs
Also, make sure the wall-wart is a regulated PS - else add a rectifier circuit to your main board before anything else
CD players are more tolerant of voltage variations than LED circuits, so the PS may NOT be regulated, and that spells danger for the LEDs
-
- Posts: 271
- Joined: Sat Jan 29, 2011 8:01 pm
How can I tell if it is a regulated ps? Is it printed somewhere on it?USS Atlantis wrote:I would actually leave the plug on and install a jack in the model
Also, make sure the wall-wart is a regulated PS - else add a rectifier circuit to your main board before anything else
CD players are more tolerant of voltage variations than LED circuits, so the PS may NOT be regulated, and that spells danger for the LEDs
Also, the cd player in question no longer functions, not because of power, but because it no longer reads the cd. I should be able then to take the jack out of the non functioning cd player and use that in my model stand?
Since my customary farewell would appear oddly self-serving; I shall simply say, good luck.
I'm married. That's what being married means. It means you sleep together, but you can't get none!
(Martin Lawrence in Bad Boys)
I'm married. That's what being married means. It means you sleep together, but you can't get none!
(Martin Lawrence in Bad Boys)
- USS Atlantis
- Posts: 2388
- Joined: Sat Sep 08, 2007 6:44 pm
- Location: Galaxy 217, Orion Arm, Sol System, Sol III, 44° 53' N 93° 13' W (Local coordinate system)
- Contact:
Yes, it should say on the PS if it's a regulated supply or notGrouncontrol wrote:How can I tell if it is a regulated ps? Is it printed somewhere on it?USS Atlantis wrote:I would actually leave the plug on and install a jack in the model
Also, make sure the wall-wart is a regulated PS - else add a rectifier circuit to your main board before anything else
CD players are more tolerant of voltage variations than LED circuits, so the PS may NOT be regulated, and that spells danger for the LEDs
Also, the cd player in question no longer functions, not because of power, but because it no longer reads the cd. I should be able then to take the jack out of the non functioning cd player and use that in my model stand?
And you can rip the jack out of the CD-Player - though de-soldering it might be problematical
I'd just order a new one from Jameco
-
- Posts: 271
- Joined: Sat Jan 29, 2011 8:01 pm
Re: powering lights for 1/350 enterprise
Can I ask, could you share any information you have on designing such lighting circuits? Anything would be of assistance as I have four of these lits and want to eventually build a perfect example!Grouncontrol wrote:hello all! I am beginning work on my pl 1/350 enterprise, and am building my own circuits for the lights. I've currently got my blinking formation and strobe circuits being powered by a 9 volt battery, and will be basing the rest of my lights on 9 volts. My question is this; I have a wall wart that was originally intended for a portable cd player. The output of the wall wart is 9 volts 600 mA. Can I safely use this wall wart (if I remove the adapter for the cd player and directly solder the ends onto my pc board) to power my circuits.
Not looking for a shocking experience!
Many thanks in advance!
-
- Posts: 3419
- Joined: Fri Jul 12, 2002 4:13 pm
- Location: Chesapeake, VA
The only way to know properly is to use a voltmeter. I can tell you almost all consumer wall warts are unregulated; the regulation is done by the device itself.Grouncontrol wrote:How can I tell if it is a regulated ps? Is it printed somewhere on it?USS Atlantis wrote:I would actually leave the plug on and install a jack in the model
Also, make sure the wall-wart is a regulated PS - else add a rectifier circuit to your main board before anything else
CD players are more tolerant of voltage variations than LED circuits, so the PS may NOT be regulated, and that spells danger for the LEDs
I am fearful when I see people substituting fear for reason
Doesn't he have to add up the amperage of his LED's for this? I am just learning about electronics but one of the very first lessons was making sure the power supply can handle the load.
The Trek Modeler DIY kit for the Refit comes with 56 led's. When you calculate the resistance needed for a normal white LED you are supposed to use 20mA. Doing the math that way, those led's would draw 1120mA. The wall wart that comes with that kit is a 1.4A or 1400mA.
So if he is lighting the same ship and using anywhere near the same amount of led's it seems that the 600mA wall wart will not cut it.
Edit - I just went back and looked at the list and while there are 56 resistors in the kit there are a few more LED's than that and they are of varying sizes so it's not as clearcut as I made it. However it's still far more than 600mA.
Am I wrong? And if so please explain so I can learn.
The Trek Modeler DIY kit for the Refit comes with 56 led's. When you calculate the resistance needed for a normal white LED you are supposed to use 20mA. Doing the math that way, those led's would draw 1120mA. The wall wart that comes with that kit is a 1.4A or 1400mA.
So if he is lighting the same ship and using anywhere near the same amount of led's it seems that the 600mA wall wart will not cut it.
Edit - I just went back and looked at the list and while there are 56 resistors in the kit there are a few more LED's than that and they are of varying sizes so it's not as clearcut as I made it. However it's still far more than 600mA.
Am I wrong? And if so please explain so I can learn.