Hi there,
I just bought a fantastic box of tricks from Radio Shack. Here are some of the highlights off the box:
"Multi-Voltage Power Bank. Power Adapter, Battery Charger"
"Powers products requiring 3, 4.5, 6, 7.5 or 9VDC and upto 1000mA current"
"international 90/240VAC auto sensing input - for US and foreign travel"
Product code: 273-1900
http://www.radioshack.com/product.asp?cata...t%5Fid=273-1900 Currently selling for 15 bucks in Oakland, CA.
This little box is great. Its about the same size as a clamshell zaurus, it has a fold away US style plug and it takes 4 NiMH batteries. You can use it in different modes: battery charger (using 90 or 240V), AC->DC power adapter, DC power adpater (from the NiNHbatteries). You can change the output voltage from 3 to 9V and it provides 1A of power.
After a little voltmeter testing I plugged it into my SL-C860 using 4 freshly charged 2500mAh Energizer Ni-NH batteries, and set it to the 4.5V output setting (note: I needed a B style radio shack adpater plug, with the tip set to positive).
The power adapter sustained my zaurus for 4 hours before turning itself off and letting the Zaurus automatically switch to its own power supply (sweat!!!), I ran the following contiously for the 4 hours:
- Screen on full brightness.
- Pretec wireless card, with Opera pointing to USGS CA Earthquake website (it auto updates every
15 or so minutes).
- MP3 player running in continous loop using head phones.
- Qtopia clock app
- note the screen saver popped up every now and again.
This is a little risky since you're charging your zaurus using 4.5V rather than the recommend 5V, but I expect there is voltage regulator (or zener diode) in the zaurus which drops the voltage down to 3.3V (or something) and these guys normally require that you have at least a 1V delta between your in voltage and output voltage so this is probably right on the threshold. When I get a bit more time I'm planning on putting together a simple 5V zener diode circuit to drop the 6V adapter output to 5V which will definitely satisfy Sharp's power requirements (but eat up a lttle more power).
Anyway I thought I'd share since the 4.5V output appears to work quite will and gives you an extra 4 hours of high power fun.
Carl C.
Ps. I dont gurantee your results, so please make up your own minds on whether you're happy with the 4.5V or not.... but this is a cool box of tricks!