bobhenry wrote:There are several neat little clocks and radios that are 110 ac with 9 volt backup. Is there a quick and dirty way to drop the 12 v onboard battery voltage to 9 volts with a dropping resistor to allow continuious operation whether plugged into shore power or not. What ohms and how to due schematics are welcome.
TPMcGinty wrote:bobhenry wrote:There are several neat little clocks and radios that are 110 ac with 9 volt backup. Is there a quick and dirty way to drop the 12 v onboard battery voltage to 9 volts with a dropping resistor to allow continuious operation whether plugged into shore power or not. What ohms and how to due schematics are welcome.
Aren't the 9 volt backup batteries just to maintain the time internally in case the power goes out? If I remember right, my clock will stop displaying the time when the power goes out but will remember the time for when the power comes back. Plus the time seems to go faster on the 9 volt battery. It always seems to be 5-10 minutes fast after the power is restored.
Larwyn wrote:Why not get a wind up clock. No drain on any system other than the energy to wind it up..........![]()
BrwBier wrote:Well, back in the 60s if you wanted to put a 12v starter and lights in your car and not change everything else you just turned a screw diwn through the tar top and taped 6v from the middle of the battery. So just go 3/4 of the way and get 9v.![]()
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brwbier
Alphacarina wrote:BrwBier wrote:Well, back in the 60s if you wanted to put a 12v starter and lights in your car and not change everything else you just turned a screw diwn through the tar top and taped 6v from the middle of the battery. So just go 3/4 of the way and get 9v.![]()
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brwbier
A 12 volt battery is made up of six 2 volt cells - So you can get 6 volts 'from the middle of the battery' by tapping 3 of the 2 volt cells
But you're never going to get 9 volts from '3/4 of the way' - 8 volts sure or 10 if you like, but never 9
Don
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