| Author |
Message |
Charlie Wilkes
Guest
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Posted:
Sun Feb 06, 2005 8:40 am Post subject:
Question about wiring wall cubes in series to get 30v. |
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Today I bought a well-used HP DJ 697c to print from DOS apps.
It came with no adapter. The label specifies 30 volts at 400ma.
I took an old plustek scanner 24v/600ma cube and a radioshack 3-12v
adjustable cube and wired them in series. I got 36v with no load, so
I figured that was probably about right. The printer powered up, but
after a few minutes the plustek power cube failed. The rshack cube is
still fine.
This group's FAQ reassured me that I wasn't doing anything too crazy,
but it mentioned a rectifier, which I don't have. I didn't get the
impression the rectifier was really essential, but I don't know much
about electronics.
Any ideas why this setup would fail?
Charlie
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James Sweet
Guest
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Posted:
Sun Feb 06, 2005 8:40 am Post subject:
Re: Question about wiring wall cubes in series to get 30v. |
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"Charlie Wilkes" <charlie_wilkes@users.easynews.com> wrote in message
news:d8hb011ljuv0pnh403bb8e7ec4l3jm4dh4@4ax.com...
| Quote: | Today I bought a well-used HP DJ 697c to print from DOS apps.
It came with no adapter. The label specifies 30 volts at 400ma.
I took an old plustek scanner 24v/600ma cube and a radioshack 3-12v
adjustable cube and wired them in series. I got 36v with no load, so
I figured that was probably about right. The printer powered up, but
after a few minutes the plustek power cube failed. The rshack cube is
still fine.
This group's FAQ reassured me that I wasn't doing anything too crazy,
but it mentioned a rectifier, which I don't have. I didn't get the
impression the rectifier was really essential, but I don't know much
about electronics.
Any ideas why this setup would fail?
Charlie
|
Were the power adapters AC or DC output? If they're DC then they already
have a rectifier built in. Wiring wall warts in series is generally a bad
idea, particularly if you don't know the details of the output. 24v should
run the printer just fine, no need to muck around with the two adapters. |
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NSM
Guest
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Posted:
Sun Feb 06, 2005 8:40 am Post subject:
Re: Question about wiring wall cubes in series to get 30v. |
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"Charlie Wilkes" <charlie_wilkes@users.easynews.com> wrote in message
news:d8hb011ljuv0pnh403bb8e7ec4l3jm4dh4@4ax.com...
| Quote: | Today I bought a well-used HP DJ 697c to print from DOS apps.
It came with no adapter. The label specifies 30 volts at 400ma.
I took an old plustek scanner 24v/600ma cube and a radioshack 3-12v
adjustable cube and wired them in series. I got 36v with no load, so
I figured that was probably about right. The printer powered up, but
after a few minutes the plustek power cube failed. The rshack cube is
still fine.
This group's FAQ reassured me that I wasn't doing anything too crazy,
but it mentioned a rectifier, which I don't have. I didn't get the
impression the rectifier was really essential, but I don't know much
about electronics.
|
You might find one in a thrift or
http://www.allelectronics.com/cgi-bin/category.cgi?category=480&item=PS-2416&type=store
might be close enough.
--
N
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Sam Goldwasser
Guest
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Posted:
Sun Feb 06, 2005 7:45 pm Post subject:
Re: Question about wiring wall cubes in series to get 30v. |
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"NSM" <nowrite@to.me> writes:
| Quote: | "Charlie Wilkes" <charlie_wilkes@users.easynews.com> wrote in message
news:d8hb011ljuv0pnh403bb8e7ec4l3jm4dh4@4ax.com...
Today I bought a well-used HP DJ 697c to print from DOS apps.
It came with no adapter. The label specifies 30 volts at 400ma.
I took an old plustek scanner 24v/600ma cube and a radioshack 3-12v
adjustable cube and wired them in series. I got 36v with no load, so
I figured that was probably about right. The printer powered up, but
after a few minutes the plustek power cube failed. The rshack cube is
still fine.
This group's FAQ reassured me that I wasn't doing anything too crazy,
but it mentioned a rectifier, which I don't have. I didn't get the
impression the rectifier was really essential, but I don't know much
about electronics.
|
Without knowing the details, it's hard to say what went wrong. What
were the exact ratings of the adjustable wall adapter? Many of those
are poorly constructed with limited current capability.
Jameco usually has a pretty good assortment. www.jameco.com
--- sam | Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ Mirror: http://repairfaq.ece.drexel.edu/
Repair | Main Table of Contents: http://repairfaq.ece.drexel.edu/REPAIR/
+Lasers | Sam's Laser FAQ: http://repairfaq.ece.drexel.edu/sam/lasersam.htm
| Mirror Sites: http://repairfaq.ece.drexel.edu/REPAIR/F_mirror.html
Note: These links are hopefully temporary until we can sort out the excessive
traffic on Repairfaq.org.
Important: Anything sent to the email address in the message header above is
ignored unless my full name is included in the subject line. Or, you can
contact me via the Feedback Form in the FAQs. |
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Charlie Wilkes
Guest
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Posted:
Tue Feb 08, 2005 4:45 pm Post subject:
Re: Question about wiring wall cubes in series to get 30v. |
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On 06 Feb 2005 08:45:46 -0500, Sam Goldwasser <sam@saul.cis.upenn.edu>
wrote:
| Quote: | "NSM" <nowrite@to.me> writes:
"Charlie Wilkes" <charlie_wilkes@users.easynews.com> wrote in message
news:d8hb011ljuv0pnh403bb8e7ec4l3jm4dh4@4ax.com...
Today I bought a well-used HP DJ 697c to print from DOS apps.
It came with no adapter. The label specifies 30 volts at 400ma.
I took an old plustek scanner 24v/600ma cube and a radioshack 3-12v
adjustable cube and wired them in series. I got 36v with no load, so
I figured that was probably about right. The printer powered up, but
after a few minutes the plustek power cube failed. The rshack cube is
still fine.
This group's FAQ reassured me that I wasn't doing anything too crazy,
but it mentioned a rectifier, which I don't have. I didn't get the
impression the rectifier was really essential, but I don't know much
about electronics.
Without knowing the details, it's hard to say what went wrong. What
were the exact ratings of the adjustable wall adapter? Many of those
are poorly constructed with limited current capability.
The requirement was 30v 400ma. All the cubes were rated at 600ma. |
I felt wantonly destructive that night so I repeated the experiment,
this time with the surviving (3-12v adjustable) cube and two others
like it. I set two of them at 9v and one at 12v. Then I twisted and
I taped and I plugged it in and it works! I've had it going for a
couple of days now, printing away like a brand-new HP printer, which
is the price I paid for it with new cartridges. I just hope I don't
end up burning down another house.
Charlie
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Jerry G.
Guest
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Posted:
Tue Feb 08, 2005 7:42 pm Post subject:
Re: Question about wiring wall cubes in series to get 30v. |
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As long as their current rating is high enough, it should be very safe. The
total current output will be of the lowest rated one. The voltage output
will be the sum of all that are in series.
I personally would go around to the various electronic suppliers and try to
get a 30 Volt supply, that is rated to at least 500 ma or more. This way
only one outlet will be used, and it is a more practical way to supply your
unit.
--
Jerry G.
=====
"Charlie Wilkes" <charlie_wilkes@users.easynews.com> wrote in message
news:656h015rgd344ouhho17cll0vq448gh7if@4ax.com...
On 06 Feb 2005 08:45:46 -0500, Sam Goldwasser <sam@saul.cis.upenn.edu>
wrote:
| Quote: | "NSM" <nowrite@to.me> writes:
"Charlie Wilkes" <charlie_wilkes@users.easynews.com> wrote in message
news:d8hb011ljuv0pnh403bb8e7ec4l3jm4dh4@4ax.com...
Today I bought a well-used HP DJ 697c to print from DOS apps.
It came with no adapter. The label specifies 30 volts at 400ma.
I took an old plustek scanner 24v/600ma cube and a radioshack 3-12v
adjustable cube and wired them in series. I got 36v with no load, so
I figured that was probably about right. The printer powered up, but
after a few minutes the plustek power cube failed. The rshack cube is
still fine.
This group's FAQ reassured me that I wasn't doing anything too crazy,
but it mentioned a rectifier, which I don't have. I didn't get the
impression the rectifier was really essential, but I don't know much
about electronics.
Without knowing the details, it's hard to say what went wrong. What
were the exact ratings of the adjustable wall adapter? Many of those
are poorly constructed with limited current capability.
The requirement was 30v 400ma. All the cubes were rated at 600ma. |
I felt wantonly destructive that night so I repeated the experiment,
this time with the surviving (3-12v adjustable) cube and two others
like it. I set two of them at 9v and one at 12v. Then I twisted and
I taped and I plugged it in and it works! I've had it going for a
couple of days now, printing away like a brand-new HP printer, which
is the price I paid for it with new cartridges. I just hope I don't
end up burning down another house.
Charlie
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jakdedert
Guest
|
Posted:
Tue Feb 08, 2005 10:41 pm Post subject:
Re: Question about wiring wall cubes in series to get 30v. |
|
|
Charlie Wilkes wrote:
| Quote: | Today I bought a well-used HP DJ 697c to print from DOS apps.
It came with no adapter. The label specifies 30 volts at 400ma.
I took an old plustek scanner 24v/600ma cube and a radioshack 3-12v
adjustable cube and wired them in series. I got 36v with no load, so
I figured that was probably about right. The printer powered up, but
after a few minutes the plustek power cube failed. The rshack cube is
still fine.
This group's FAQ reassured me that I wasn't doing anything too crazy,
but it mentioned a rectifier, which I don't have. I didn't get the
impression the rectifier was really essential, but I don't know much
about electronics.
Any ideas why this setup would fail?
|
There is no info given as to the nature of the voltage: AC or DC. Two
adaptors in series? The adjustable wall wart would have to be AC to pass
any current at all through the second one, but I've never seen an adjustable
*AC* wall wart. I suppose they could exist, but every one I've seen was DC.
If it's the case that the OP needs 30 volts *AC* then a simple transformer
should suffice. Finding a ~30v transformer might be difficult, but I'll bet
the tolerance is not all that close. If the unit accepts AC, then there's a
complete power supply inside which probably includes some degree of
regulation.
I certainly wouldn't mess around with cascading wall warts....
jak
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Sam Goldwasser
Guest
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Posted:
Wed Feb 09, 2005 4:19 am Post subject:
Re: Question about wiring wall cubes in series to get 30v. |
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"jakdedert" <jdedert@bellsouth.net> writes:
<snip>
| Quote: | There is no info given as to the nature of the voltage: AC or DC. Two
adaptors in series? The adjustable wall wart would have to be AC to pass
any current at all through the second one, but I've never seen an adjustable
|
Huh? Think: two DC power supplies in series.
--- sam | Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ Mirror: http://repairfaq.ece.drexel.edu/
Repair | Main Table of Contents: http://repairfaq.ece.drexel.edu/REPAIR/
+Lasers | Sam's Laser FAQ: http://repairfaq.ece.drexel.edu/sam/lasersam.htm
| Mirror Sites: http://repairfaq.ece.drexel.edu/REPAIR/F_mirror.html
Note: These links are hopefully temporary until we can sort out the excessive
traffic on Repairfaq.org.
Important: Anything sent to the email address in the message header above is
ignored unless my full name is included in the subject line. Or, you can
contact me via the Feedback Form in the FAQs. |
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jakdedert
Guest
|
Posted:
Thu Feb 10, 2005 12:10 am Post subject:
Re: Question about wiring wall cubes in series to get 30v. |
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Sam Goldwasser wrote:
| Quote: | "jakdedert" <jdedert@bellsouth.net> writes:
snip
There is no info given as to the nature of the voltage: AC or DC.
Two adaptors in series? The adjustable wall wart would have to be
AC to pass any current at all through the second one, but I've never
seen an adjustable
Huh? Think: two DC power supplies in series.
Okay, I finally get what the OP was talking about when he said 'series'. If |
I understand, what he actually did was commoned one leg of the OUTPUT of
each device and used the two remaining leads as the output....
I agree with James. Try it on 24 volts (one adaptor: unfortunately, the one
he blew out), or else obtain a suitable supply (or buy a transformer and
build one). While what he's doing is not cascading supplies, it still
sounds like a recipe for disaster...not a huge disaster, to be sure, but....
At the very least, I wouldn't leave this kludge plugged in when not
attended.
jak
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