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#1
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I just revived an old non-working laptop that we were given. What options
are available to get some added work hours out of it when away from the house? We have an inverter/drive corrector, and could plug that into one of our 17AH 12volt batteries, and then plug the laptop's AC adapter into the inverter. That seems inefficient, and maybe there is a good reason not to power the laptop this way. Would it be reasonable to make an adapter to plug the laptop directly into the 17AH battery, or is there some reason this would be bad for the laptop? Thanks. Clear skies, Alan |
#2
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![]() We have an inverter/drive corrector, and could plug that into one of our 17AH 12volt batteries, and then plug the laptop's AC adapter into the inverter. That seems inefficient, and maybe there is a good reason not to power the laptop this way. Would it be reasonable to make an adapter to plug the laptop directly into the 17AH battery, or is there some reason this would be bad for the laptop? HI Alan: If your laptop can use 12 volt DC input power, that's a fine solution. Unfortunately, most of them use some other voltage. What most people do is run them off inverters. You might want to head down to Radio Shack and get one of their modern inverters which are actually quite good. They also have some adapters that will allow you to plug your laptop directly into a battery, and you might want to check to see if one of these might work for you. Peace, Rod Mollise Author of _Choosing and Using a Schmidt Cassegrain Telescope_ Like SCTs and MCTs? Check-out sct-user, the mailing list for CAT fanciers! Goto http://members.aol.com/RMOLLISE/index.html |
#3
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![]() Rod Mollise wrote: We have an inverter/drive corrector, and could plug that into one of our 17AH 12volt batteries, and then plug the laptop's AC adapter into the inverter. That seems inefficient, and maybe there is a good reason not to power the laptop this way. Would it be reasonable to make an adapter to plug the laptop directly into the 17AH battery, or is there some reason this would be bad for the laptop? HI Alan: If your laptop can use 12 volt DC input power, that's a fine solution. Unfortunately, most of them use some other voltage. What most people do is run them off inverters. You might want to head down to Radio Shack and get one of their modern inverters which are actually quite good. They also have some adapters that will allow you to plug your laptop directly into a battery, and you might want to check to see if one of these might work for you. I'll just add that Costco, Sam's, and other such places have good deals on inverters. There are direct 12 volt adapters available for some laptops through the Internet. Try Googling for the brand and model of the laptop you own. -- Pat O'Connell [note munged EMail address] Take nothing but pictures, Leave nothing but footprints, Kill nothing but vandals... |
#4
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![]() Rod Mollise wrote: We have an inverter/drive corrector, and could plug that into one of our 17AH 12volt batteries, and then plug the laptop's AC adapter into the inverter. That seems inefficient, and maybe there is a good reason not to power the laptop this way. Would it be reasonable to make an adapter to plug the laptop directly into the 17AH battery, or is there some reason this would be bad for the laptop? HI Alan: If your laptop can use 12 volt DC input power, that's a fine solution. Unfortunately, most of them use some other voltage. What most people do is run them off inverters. You might want to head down to Radio Shack and get one of their modern inverters which are actually quite good. They also have some adapters that will allow you to plug your laptop directly into a battery, and you might want to check to see if one of these might work for you. I'll just add that Costco, Sam's, and other such places have good deals on inverters. There are direct 12 volt adapters available for some laptops through the Internet. Try Googling for the brand and model of the laptop you own. -- Pat O'Connell [note munged EMail address] Take nothing but pictures, Leave nothing but footprints, Kill nothing but vandals... |
#5
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On 2004-04-11, Alan French wrote:
Would it be reasonable to make an adapter to plug the laptop directly into the 17AH battery, or is there some reason this would be bad for the laptop? IBM has a car adapter for ThinkPads. There may be one for your machine. The laptop AC adapter might be intolerant of the output from your inverter. The laptop also might run down your 17 amp-hour battery pretty quickly. The instructions for my IBM car adapter said you wanted to avoid leaving it plugged in while the car was parked. |
#6
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"Alan French" wrote in message
... I just revived an old non-working laptop that we were given. What options are available to get some added work hours out of it when away from the house? We have an inverter/drive corrector, and could plug that into one of our 17AH 12volt batteries, and then plug the laptop's AC adapter into the inverter. That seems inefficient, and maybe there is a good reason not to power the laptop this way. Would it be reasonable to make an adapter to plug the laptop directly into the 17AH battery, or is there some reason this would be bad for the laptop? Rod, Pat, and William, Thanks for your advice. I appreciate it. For some reason I had assumed that laptops used 12v, but I see that the one here uses 15v. Clear skies, Alan |
#7
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![]() Alan French wrote: "Alan French" wrote in message ... I just revived an old non-working laptop that we were given. What options are available to get some added work hours out of it when away from the house? We have an inverter/drive corrector, and could plug that into one of our 17AH 12volt batteries, and then plug the laptop's AC adapter into the inverter. That seems inefficient, and maybe there is a good reason not to power the laptop this way. Would it be reasonable to make an adapter to plug the laptop directly into the 17AH battery, or is there some reason this would be bad for the laptop? Rod, Pat, and William, Thanks for your advice. I appreciate it. For some reason I had assumed that laptops used 12v, but I see that the one here uses 15v. That's like mine--gotta find an inverter, of enough capacity to power you laptop (check the current rating of the laptop's transformer). -- Pat O'Connell [note munged EMail address] Take nothing but pictures, Leave nothing but footprints, Kill nothing but vandals... |
#8
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![]() Alan French wrote: "Alan French" wrote in message ... I just revived an old non-working laptop that we were given. What options are available to get some added work hours out of it when away from the house? We have an inverter/drive corrector, and could plug that into one of our 17AH 12volt batteries, and then plug the laptop's AC adapter into the inverter. That seems inefficient, and maybe there is a good reason not to power the laptop this way. Would it be reasonable to make an adapter to plug the laptop directly into the 17AH battery, or is there some reason this would be bad for the laptop? Rod, Pat, and William, Thanks for your advice. I appreciate it. For some reason I had assumed that laptops used 12v, but I see that the one here uses 15v. That's like mine--gotta find an inverter, of enough capacity to power you laptop (check the current rating of the laptop's transformer). -- Pat O'Connell [note munged EMail address] Take nothing but pictures, Leave nothing but footprints, Kill nothing but vandals... |
#9
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![]() We have an inverter/drive corrector, and could plug that into one of our 17AH 12volt batteries, and then plug the laptop's AC adapter into the inverter. That seems inefficient, and maybe there is a good reason not to power the laptop this way. Would it be reasonable to make an adapter to plug the laptop directly into the 17AH battery, or is there some reason this would be bad for the laptop? HI Alan: If your laptop can use 12 volt DC input power, that's a fine solution. Unfortunately, most of them use some other voltage. What most people do is run them off inverters. You might want to head down to Radio Shack and get one of their modern inverters which are actually quite good. They also have some adapters that will allow you to plug your laptop directly into a battery, and you might want to check to see if one of these might work for you. Peace, Rod Mollise Author of _Choosing and Using a Schmidt Cassegrain Telescope_ Like SCTs and MCTs? Check-out sct-user, the mailing list for CAT fanciers! Goto http://members.aol.com/RMOLLISE/index.html |
#10
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On 2004-04-11, Alan French wrote:
Would it be reasonable to make an adapter to plug the laptop directly into the 17AH battery, or is there some reason this would be bad for the laptop? IBM has a car adapter for ThinkPads. There may be one for your machine. The laptop AC adapter might be intolerant of the output from your inverter. The laptop also might run down your 17 amp-hour battery pretty quickly. The instructions for my IBM car adapter said you wanted to avoid leaving it plugged in while the car was parked. |
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